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Expanding Affordable and
Efficient Housing

Americans are burdened by sky-high housing and energy costs. We have the tools today to meaningfully tackle both. By increasing housing supply in strategic areas and equitably electrifying homes, we can slash energy bills, reduce indoor and outdoor pollution, and cut costs for housing, transportation, and healthcare.

The Analysis

Energy and housing affordability go hand-in-hand. Without laser-focused policy interventions, we risk increased pollution, runaway urban sprawl, more people facing homelessness, and higher utility bills. By working with state decision-makers, environmental justice and housing advocates, and labor movement leaders, we can ensure that clean, smart housing solutions are accessible for everyone.
  • Equitably electrifying homes could save Americans $96 billion through reduced utility bills over the next 25 years.
  • Upgraded electric homes can reduce climate pollution by 45 to 72 percent and reduce indoor air pollution by 50 percent.

Abundant and Affordable Climate-Smart Housing for All

We all deserve homes that protect us from heat waves and winter storms without polluting the air we breathe. Pollution from burning fuel in buildings is responsible for more health impacts than burning coal—and it generates 13 percent of U.S. climate pollution.

But it doesn’t have to be this way.

With state-of-the-art equipment, we can now upgrade our homes to use clean electricity instead of gas for space heating, hot water heating, and cooking. Upgraded electric homes can reduce climate pollution by 45 to 72 percent and reduce indoor air pollution by 50 percent. Plus, equitably electrifying homes could save U.S. households a total of $96 billion through reduced utility bills over the next 25 years.

We’re building a policy roadmap to take on the climate crisis and the housing crisis while lowering costs for  families.

Affordable and Efficient Housing

Housing can be affordable, energy-efficient, and abundant.

Reducing dangerous pollution and improving our health can and should go hand-in-hand with saving people money.

Dig Deeper

  • America is in a housing crisis. The world is in a climate crisis. With the right policies, we can solve them both together and save money for American families.

    Tony Sirna

    Deputy Policy Director, Buildings

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