99% Invisible - 547- Cooking with Gas
Episode Date: August 1, 2023Back in January, Bloomberg News published a story quoting an obscure government official named Richard Trumka Jr. He works with the Consumer Product Safety Commission, which regulates stuff like furni...ture and electronics and household appliances. Basically, the agency is supposed to make sure that the stuff we buy is safe, and won't kill us or make us sick.  The Bloomberg story talked about how a growing body of research shows that gas stoves are really bad for indoor air quality. They let off pollutants like nitrogen dioxide and carbon monoxide, and they've been linked to heart problems, cancer, and asthma. And in this story, Trumka said the government would look into it, and maybe recommend some regulations on the appliance. Within days, the US went batshit crazy and gas stoves were all over the news. They had become the subject of the latest skirmish in our seemingly never-ending culture war. Cooking with Gas
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This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
Back in January, Bloomberg News published a story quoting an obscure government official
named Richard Trumpka Jr. He works with the Consumer Product Safety Commission,
which regulates stuff like furniture and electronics and household appliances.
Basically, the agency is supposed to make sure that the stuff we buy is safe and won't kill us or make us sick.
The Bloomberg story talked about how a growing body of research shows that gas stoves are
really bad for indoor air quality. They let off pollutants like nitrogen dioxide and carbon
monoxide, and they've been linked to heart problems, cancer and asthma.
And in this story, Trump has said that the government would look into it and maybe recommend some
regulations on the appliance.
Within days, the U.S. went bat shit crazy, and gas stoves were all over the news.
They had become the subject of the latest skirmish in our seemingly never-ending culture
war.
The safety of in-home gas stoves is sparking a political battle in Washington.
If the maniacs in the White House come for my stove,
they can pry it from my cold dead hand.
I'm a cook.
Nobody's gonna tell me I can't cook with gas.
First of all, any good cook cooks with gas.
Democrats are coming for your kitchen appliances.
The federal government has no business
telling American families how to cook their dinner. I was a little surprised by the level of emotion generated by this
common household appliance, but it turns out there is a long and well documented history
that explains our current moments. The natural gas industry has spent the past 100 years
selling Americans on the gas stove and trying to convince us that it is superior than the
electric alternative, that it's classier, more functional, and that it just cooks our
food better.
Alongside that full-bore advertising campaign, the gas industry has waged another quieter
battle, mostly beyond the view of the public.
They've worked for decades to obscure and dispute what scientists increasingly
know is true. Gas stoves are bad for our health, no matter how much we love that little
click-click-click-whoosh sound. Which is admittedly a really great sound.
Today we're going to look at those parallel histories and understand how we got to this
place and why Americans have so many feelings about our
stoves. Our guide today is Rebecca Lieber. She's a climate reporter who's worked for
Mother Jones, Christ and Fox, and she's done a lot of work to unearth the history of the
gas stove and what its popularity means for our health and the climate.
Okay Rebecca, before we get into the history, I want to talk about the gas stove that you
have in your apartment.
I am curious. Do you have any strong feelings about it?
I am by no means a great cook. I am pretty casual about it, but I do think I bought into this
myth around the gastov before I started reporting on this. I think I just had this vague sense that
cooking with gas was just better. It's a fact.
It's better than electric cooking. And now that I am reconsidering all of that, I realize how
long I've been exposed to this imagery around expensive, huge ranges that are in these gleaming
large homes. It's just this idea of a status symbol. And while I don't know if I have
the same visceral reaction that some people do to using a flame when cooking, I realize
I was influenced by this larger narrative around gas cooking. And it led me down this rabbit
hole of investigating why this is just taken as a matter of fact that gas cooking is
superior.
So, let's talk a little bit about that narrative and how it came to be.
How far back can you trace the gas industries push for gas stoves?
And also, why did they feel like they even had to advertise?
Like, what were they up against?
So this was the part I had the most fun doing because it took a lot of archival research going through newspapers in the last century
to dig up ads showing how the industry was hiring
celebrities of the time to promote gas appliances.
I'd say start looking at early 20th century.
That's when gas was competing with wood fired appliances
and coal fired appliances and electricity,
so the gas industry had to find an edge and also market and convince consumers that this
was the product to invest in.
Okay, so this is a familiar story in a lot of ways.
They're fighting for market share, and so of course they turn to advertising.
And there's one example that you write about, which is the phrase cooking with gas, or now we're cooking with gas. Can you tell me about the origins of that phrase?
Yeah, this is a great story because this originated from the gas industry itself. In the 1930s,
a American gas association executive helped plant the story with the comedian Bob Hope's writers.
So it became a part of his routine and really popularized this phrase that now we see everywhere.
I was watching a TV show not long ago that had this in their writing.
There is a very old Daffy Duck cartoon that also used now you're cooking with gas and
it's supposed to mean now you're really on fire.
So this is just one of those ways that we have really normalized gases as the superior product. This is just part of our everyday language, and it originated with a gas industry executive.
And so how did the industries advertising strategy change over time, you know, beyond the
network looking with gas?
Well, we see this early inception of influencer campaigns before there were really influencers.
In the 1950s, the gas industry had this ad that featured actors as housewives touting
their all-gas kitchen and convincing their husbands to buy them new appliances.
Right away, did you know that this kitchen won an award from the woman's home companion?
And really they thought of everything.
I just love the convenience and modern styling of this building gas range.
So there's plenty of examples like this throughout the decades, but one of my favorite examples was this 1980s era ad that I kind of stumbled along on YouTube. Just like the 1950s commercial starring
housewives was very much of its era, this 1980s ad is this incredibly cringe-worthy rap about gas cooking.
Cooking with gas.
Cooking with gas.
We all cook better when we're cooking with gas.
Gas is so hot, it's not on when it's off.
It's the only way to cook.
That's what we were taught.
I cook with gas because the cost is much less than electricity.
Do you wanna take a gas?
Well, it's three times less in the East or West
So remember those figures when it's time to take a test
Ugh!
I cooked with gas cause broil and soap cream
The flame consumes the smoke and grease you know what I mean
And when I bake a pie to put on the sill
myself cleaning other andcavani spill,
cooking with gas, cooking with gas.
We all cook that up when we're cooking with...
Oh my lord.
Yeah, this is always a crowd favorite.
Ha ha ha.
It's incredible.
And this really worked.
I mean, the outcome of this advertising
was that, you know, gas stoves became pretty popular.
The sales pitch has definitely worked.
GAS went from practically non-existent to 30% during the 1970s.
And in 2019, it grew to about 50% of single family American homes.
It's even more common when you're talking about some
of the most populous cities in states like California, New York, and Illinois, there we see well over 70% of homes using
gas for cooking. But at the same time that the gas industry was pushing heavily
for people to adopt gas stoves, they were also realizing that there might be some
problems with them, right? So there's this kind of parallel history of the
industry learning about the health effects of stoves
and fighting off the regulation.
There were concerns from the very start.
We see in, really, 1900s execs aware
at least of carbon monoxide poisoning.
But over the decades, as gas grew,
there was a lot more scrutiny.
So starting around the 1950s, 1960s,
more scientific papers come out out looking at some of these
specific pollutants we're talking about. By the 1970s and definitely the 1980s, it became very clear
this was an area worth studying and that there was a lot of nuanced research to be done.
A growing concern was that this could be causing asthma in children and the big question was how much?
As it was becoming more and more clear that there was a problem here,
did this trigger anything as to how to regulate it, how to make it safer?
Yeah, what's incredible is about 40 years ago, we had this deja vu debate over indoor air quality and gas.
We had this deja vu debate over indoor air quality and gas. So in the 1980s, indoor air quality was just growing as a concern.
Of course, there was more awareness around things like second-hand smoke, but gas was also
getting more scrutiny.
So Congress held some hearings around air quality, and gas was one of the topics that would
come up.
And consumer product safety commission started to look at this, of whether this was topics that would come up. And consumer product safety commission
started to look at this,
of whether this was something that was worth regulating.
So the consumer product safety commission
asked the EPA about the effects of pollutants
like nitrogen dioxide.
And these agencies were in this dialogue
around what are the health risks
when it comes to gas cooking.
And what's wild here is they were on the cusp of possible regulation, but the EPA pointed
out that they had a lot of questions that remained, that they hoped scientists would
answer in the future.
And somehow in this back and forth, the whole thing was dropped.
This also coincides with the Reagan administration that was not known for loving regulation in general.
So in all this fuss, we just see this issue really received from popular discourse until the last few years when this became a hot topic again.
From what I gather in your answer, is it just kind of fizzled out?
Was there like, you know, some kind of shot to the heart when it came to the idea of regulation?
It's a great question. I wish I had a complete answer here, but it was a mix. I think some of it
fizzled out and dropped from public view. Another piece, though, was how the industry responded.
You see a lot of parallels here between the gas industry and tobacco industry and how it delayed
and disputed decades of scientific concerns around the risks of smoking.
And the gas industry did something pretty similar to dispute the effects from these emissions,
from gas cooking and just burning gas at large. And you see a lot of focus from them on the uncertainty
and that there are questions that need to be answered. But even when we get those studies
and we learn more of those answers,
the industry has really pounced on that
as the lack of regulation is proof
that this is a product that's safe.
The lack of regulation they fought is proof that it is safe.
That I find this very maddening about science and policy
and public health. You know, scientists do what scientists do, I find this very maddening about science and policy
and public health. You know, scientists do what scientists do,
which is like, if you ask them a question,
they don't know the answer, they'll say,
I don't know the answer.
You know, whereas everyone else speaks with great authority.
Yeah, I will say in the 1980s,
a lot of these questions existed,
but we've got in a special in the last few years,
a lot more answers.
And you are talking about asthma, lung problems, cardiovascular disease,
and all of these problems can be a lot more pronounced in children who have small growing lungs,
and the elderly and people with some pre-existing conditions.
There's also a lot of pollutants that are of concern
that we're getting even more research on.
So, one we've been talking about is nitrogen dioxide,
which is linked to all of those health effects
that I described, especially asthma.
But there's also carbon monoxide that I think
most people are familiar with.
There's benzene, which is a carcinogen,
and there was a recent study that
actually said that the benzene produced by the stove can exceed what you see in second-hand
smoke.
Wow.
The other thing to mention is how that same pollution is contributing to poor air quality
outside.
These are the kinds of pollutants that interact and help to form ozone, which is also called smog.
This is methane that we're burning.
Methane is a greenhouse gas that is a potent climate pollutant.
So we're not just talking about air pollution here.
We're talking about how gas appliances and gas infrastructure help contribute to global warming.
One point the gas industry makes is that gas stoves are safe if you just use proper ventilation
like a rain chute. What do you say to that idea?
Ventilation is really important and it's true that
any kind of cooking can produce something called
particulate matter. So ventilation is important
advice when it comes to any kind of cooking and
especially when you're using the
gastro, but there are some caveats here because this doesn't work as one size fits all advice. The
gold standard for ventilation would be having a ducted range hood which basically takes that dirty
air and vents it outside, but scientists have started on packing this question of how effective these hoods really are.
And there's wide range.
Some just don't have a powerful fan.
The filter might be dirty.
Some people also just have user error where they aren't turning it on when they cook.
Lots of homes don't even have these hoods.
I don't.
So instead, I have to open a window
to try to get some air circulation in my home.
So it's unfortunately not as easy as just saying
everyone ventilate because not everyone has access.
And we don't even have great data on this.
Ventilation is important and it can cut the risk,
but it doesn't work for everyone.
So these federal agencies have been slow to regulate, but we are starting to see some
mispalities take some action. Can you talk about some of the regulations that we've started to see
over the past few years when it comes to gas stoves? Yeah, this issue really has taken off on a
local level. Cooking with gas could become a thing of the past. 13 cities in one county in California have enacted new zoning codes, encouraging or requiring
all electric for new construction.
That means no natural gas lines to new homes and apartments.
The number is over 100 municipalities now that have taken some kind of action to phase
out gas in their new construction. So this is spread far beyond California.
There are cities in Washington State, Oregon, Massachusetts that have all taken action around gas.
And we're actually seeing the snowball because now states are taking action.
New York became the first state in the country to phase out gas in new construction.
And California has been looking at this from the air quality perspective.
Illinois has had an interesting bill in the works
where they would have manufacturers label gas stoves
with some kind of danger warning.
So there's been a lot of interesting approaches here
that are all really fresh and new and ongoing.
So I think when we revisit this in just a few months,
we would see a very
different landscape than even now.
And so what is the argument for the regulation? What are they centering on? Are they centering
around indoor air quality, or are they centering around climate change and non-reliance on fossil
fuels? What is the center of the argument when it comes to regulation?
Yeah, this is a great distinction because there's a couple parallel tracks.
A lot of the regulation we're seeing
is looking at this from a climate perspective saying,
we need to phase out a big source of our climate pollution
and that would entail stop building new pipelines
to our buildings.
So New York buildings are the biggest source
of their climate pollution.
So this is significant. And by phasing out gas and new construction, we start to make that transition.
But there's also this parallel track where we're talking about health concerns and air quality.
And that has been moving a lot more slowly. And California has looked at this question.
Some states are starting
to look at this, but when it comes to regulation, that's not as far along as when we're looking at
this from a climate perspective. And what has been the gas industry's response this time around,
to some more heightened regulation on the more local level? So the gas industry has fought this
pretty hard at the local level. They've launched
these anti-electrification campaigns throughout the country, bringing really deep resources to pretty
local fights. In California, there were examples of the industry sending out robot techs, warning that
their gas stoves were going to be ripped out, which was untrue. One example that emerged in my reporting
was a PR agency that went on next door
to post and warn locals that their gastos
were being taken away to tell them to go protest.
And we're seeing versions of this fight throughout the country.
But this is also escalating where we see at the state level,
a lot of Republican states have
passed legislation blocking cities and municipalities from banning gas appliances in their new construction.
So we're seeing this fight get bigger and bigger.
And we're going to get into the federal fight because a few months ago, this just exploded
on a national stage too.
Yeah.
Okay, let's talk a little bit about this explosion
on the national stage.
The political valence of this is kind of fascinating to me,
you know, about what side you're on.
And I guess if it comes to regulation versus non-regulation,
that sort of goes along traditional lines.
But when it comes to like people who have gas stoves
versus if you have electric stoves,
you know, I grew up in the rural south,
there was no gas stoves at all when I lived in rich parts of the country.
You know, cities and stuff they had.
Gas stoves, galore, are you surprised about this as a part of the cultural war or does this
just make sense to you?
It makes a lot of sense, I think, just because I've reported on this for a few years now
that I know from my reporting that when I first raised these ideas and scientific reports
around air quality concerns, there was such a visceral reaction from people who either
ran to the defense of the stove or they were deeply concerned and ready to rip it out of
their home.
So I know that this does touch and nerve for a lot of people.
And for good reason, you're talking about
an intimate environment in your kitchen and your own health.
I was surprised by the timing of this debate
because this really blew up more of a fear of regulation
than actual regulation.
And it ties into this political culture war
because what we've seen is that some of the people
running to the defense of the stove
just don't have gas stoves.
So some of my favorite examples like Florida,
you saw Governor Ron DeSantis defend the gas stove.
If we're doing it, I just want to make it clear to everybody.
You know, when we say don't tread on Florida or let us alone,
we mean that, including on your gas stoves.
You're not taking our gas stoves away from us.
That is your choice.
And I know many people who cook a lot do not want to part
with their gas stoves.
And so we're going to stand up for that.
You know, this is like, in Florida, gas cooking is only 8% of households, so quite small.
So there is this blue red divide here.
Blue are parts of the country, have a lot more gas.
So we're talking about California, New York, Illinois, and Massachusetts are really big gas states.
And those are also states that are reliably blue
and have a population that is deeply concerned
about climate change.
And you have political leaders who are interested
in regulation and interested in moving forward
on climate change.
So it turns out this is pretty bad
for the natural gas industry that this has become a culture war because the demographics don't really work out in its
favor. If blue states turn their back on gas.
I feel like a lot of the people are fighting because a stove is, it's going to be intimate
in the kitchen. You cook with it, you use it in a certain way, you use it to make food.
But like if you wrote an article about, I don't know, like that there's a possible ban on
your water heater not getting gas versus being electric,
like nobody would care.
Does that seem true to you?
Yeah, that's a great point because water heaters
aren't innocent here.
They do also cause problems.
And when we're talking about gas cooking,
I'm also talking about a lot of other gas appliances
that have many of the same problems.
But yeah, something like a water heater,
it's so different from the gas stove
because it's kind of hidden.
Like you're not interacting with that.
You, I think it's actually, if it's working as a should,
you shouldn't ever think about it.
And the gas stove, though, is something you're using every day, or however often you cook,
and it's something you're interacting with.
Cooking has this emotional resonance, so it just hits very differently than a water heater.
But the gas industry also recognizes that, And that's why we see these influencer campaigns
throughout the years, because it knows
the public has an emotional attachment to the stove.
But it doesn't have that attachment to a water heater.
And it's using it.
It's using it as this wedge to drive people who might otherwise
be all for climate action to object to electrification,
because they don't want to lose that stove.
So it's this important emotional issue for both sides.
Coming up after the break, we talk more with Rebecca Lieber
about the wider fight for electrification,
why it's a powerful climate solution
and why it's hard for consumers
to change from gas to electric.
I'm back with Rebecca Lieber.
Rebecca, I want to ask about electrification, because ultimately, to lower carbon emissions,
we have to make this switch away from
combusted fossil fuels and towards electricity
that runs on cleaner energy sources like wind and solar.
And this gets tricky because gas is part of our infrastructure.
Like once it's piped into your house, it is in your house.
So could you talk about some of the hurdles that people face
when it comes to swapping out their gas stoves for electric ones?
So when we're talking about electric cooking,
the modern equivalent is induction.
It's not the coils that were common decades ago that no one really likes.
But induction works a little differently.
It is heating the pan directly, so the surface doesn't actually get hot and
A lot of people who have transitioned to induction love it and there's advantages to it and some disadvantages if you're comparing it one to one to gas
The learning curve to induction is not that big
I've talked to plenty of people who have installed induction in their kitchens and they love it.
It heats water super fast and they don't have to worry about burning themselves.
The bigger problems when it comes to transitioning to electric cooking, it's the infrastructure
challenge because depending on your home, you might have to change your circuit breaker.
You might have to deal with a condo association that has certain restrictions
on renovations. You might be dealing with all these different kinds of challenges, which
is why changing the home is such a complicated area because it's such an individual circumstance.
I do think this is going to get easier over the next few years. Part of that is because there are new tax breaks and incentives
through the Inflation Reduction Act past last year that will help to bring down the cost of some
of these home renovations. One other thing just to mention is it doesn't always require a huge
renovation to change your kitchen to more electric appliances. So I mentioned I'm a renter and
even using my toaster oven, I'm plugging that in instead of using my oven.
That's something I do as an alternative. And for renters especially a solution
could be buying an induction plug-in stove top. You just kind of put it on top of
your stove and plug it into the wall and it works kind of like a hot plate.
That's another Renter Friendly solution. Just a paint a picture that this can have a diverse array
of solutions. I mean, what is interesting to me is that in a way the gas industry is completely
right to be fearful because there are lots of patches and solutions to provide electrification. But if a gas pipe isn't
brought into a building, it's the end of the game for them. Yeah, the new construction is really
important because if we're banning gas and new construction, that signals that this is an industry
on the decline. It's very important for the gas industry that it doesn't go the way of coal,
where we consider this a fuel of the past.
But if gas is blocked in new construction,
it's signaling exactly that.
That this is an industry that's shrinking
with this shrinking customer base.
And that worries not just the gas industry,
but its investors, banks,
it causes a lot bigger problems.
And that's why this fight over new construction
is really looming over the industry.
That this is hugely important for its future.
And as a person who covers this,
do you expect to see more state or even federal bands on gas stoves?
Is this gonna fizzle out the way it did 40 years ago?
Or do you expect it to have a little bit more momentum?
I definitely think it has more momentum. I think we've passed this turning point here and
we're on a clock for addressing climate change here too. So I think the the entire context of this
is very different. I would say though that what to expect is is not necessarily just bans. I think
this could take a lot of different shapes.
I think what the Biden administration's actually focused on
is pushing voluntary consumer incentives,
so pushing electrification and not mandating it.
I think some states were seeing take different approaches.
Like I mentioned, maybe we'll see warning labels on gas.
It's not a one-size-solution, but I do expect a lot more movement here.
Rebecca, thank you so much for talking with us and thanks so much for your reporting.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
99% Invisible was produced this week by Jacob Moldinato Medina, edited by Delaney Hall,
sound mixed by Dara Hirsch, original music by a director of sound Swan Rihau.
Kurt Colstad is the digital director of the rest of the team, includes Chris Barube, Christopher
Johnson, Jason Dillium, Emmett Fitzgerald, Vivian Leigh, Losh Mbadan, Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg,
and me Roman Mars.
Special thanks this week to Charlie Spatz at the Energy and Policy Institute.
The 99% of his below- below goat was created by Stefan Lawrence.
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