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Furnace Regulation: A Burning Hot Agenda in a Chilly Economy
Illinois Review ^ | June 15, AD 2022 | John F Di Leo

Posted on 06/15/2022 5:43:16 PM PDT by jfd1776

Reflections as Joe Biden takes on the furnace manufacturers...

Regulator-in-Chief Joe Biden's latest demands on the manufacturing community include attacking the makers of furnaces and other household heating appliances for using too much energy (which is only so expensive because of their policies), and for producing too much carbon dioxide (you know, the stuff we all exhale every day of their lives, without ill effect). The Biden-Harris regime is therefore "proposing" new efficiency standards for manufacturers and distributors of such appliances, requiring the use of much more expensive manufacturing and operating processes.

If we had a divided government, with either the House or Senate in Republican hands, there might be some chance of slowing or halting such costly, foolish regulations, but with Biden, Harris, Schumer, and Pelosi all drinking from the same pitcher of Kool-Aid, once these plots are proposed, they usually go into effect a few months later, remaining on the books, causing costly problems in the marketplace for years and years, until some future administration can dial them back.

What do such regulations do? Objectively speaking, assuming the technology required is achievable and not some fantasy, they require all manufacturers across an industry to redesign all or most of their products, and obsolete and dispose of their existing stock. Obviously. But what does that really mean?

A product redesign means a companywide effort to change the components and assembly of each unit. Product by product, each company's engineering, purchasing, quality, and production departments must experiment with alternate materials, alternate components, alternate processes, and alternate vendors. This comes at a great cost.

Once the new design is achieved - this alternate design, never requested by the consumer, but one that makes Joe Biden and his micromanaging bureaucrat allies happy - the company must find a way to somehow order those new components (from a vendor base that must now develop these new parts for them), and must then retool or re-organize their manufacturing plants to incorporate these changes into their assembly lines.

Quality, distribution, and marketing must then manage the profusion of new product SKUs that they now have to keep straight. They have to find a customer base to accept the existing stock of the old version, and work on release plans to introduce the new version into their customer network. Legal and warranty departments must sort out a plan for coverage of all these now-obsoleted products, working with purchasing and distribution on a plan to stock the massive numbers of "old" parts for future repair needs, potentially as much as doubling the stock of necessary replacement parts for a decade.

This is an incredibly costly process. If done for a good reason, it may be necessary… but even then, it is still an incredibly costly process. There is simply no way to make such changes easy, cheap, or painless.

Furnaces, water heaters, and similar household appliances are typically manufactured here in the United States, because their size and relative cost makes importation unattractive. The burden of all these new regulations will therefore fall primarily on American manufacturers.

Read that sentence again, another way. The burden of these new regulations will therefore fall primarily on American employees, American factories, American distributors, American stockholders in American companies.

After months of denial, the Biden-Harris regime is finally just beginning to acknowledge the economic calamities that surround us. They don’t acknowledge how bad unemployment is, but they acknowledge that it exists. They don’t acknowledge how bad inflation is, but they acknowledge that it exists. They don’t acknowledge how incredibly costly energy has become under their policies, but they are at least finally acknowledging that energy costs have risen.

And in this environment, the Biden-Harris regime has decided to turn yet another entire industry upside down.

The American economy is in freefall, primarily because of the policies of the current regime and the current Congress. This is no time for more unforced errors, but still, they don’t stop, do they?

Let's think back on the job of our national, "federal" government. The Founding Fathers didn’t precisely anticipate the modern supply chain, the modern energy industry, the modern assembly line. But they didn’t need to.

The Founding Fathers were fully aware of the fact that supply chains change over the years. Alexander Hamilton was an import export clerk in the Caribbean in his youth…. John Hancock operated merchant ships in the North Atlantic.

Similarly, while the Founding Era pre-dated the industrial age boom of the 19th century, many of our Founding Fathers were involved in manufacturing and knew how manufacturing changed as well. George Washington’s plantation manufactured steel fasteners and clothing. Ben Franklin invented bifocal eyeglasses and the Franklin stove. Paul Revere made copper sheathing for cargo ships.

So, the Founding Fathers did understand that the free market will always be a changing panoply of products, vendors, manufacturing methods, transportation networks, and sales systems.

Even without reading Adam Smith’s classic (published the same year as our Declaration of Independence), our Founding Fathers knew that the Invisible Hand of the marketplace would always be an infinitely better manager of these changes than any governmental rule or regulation.

And so it was that the Founding Fathers gave us a government that left the market alone to handle these matters. They wrote a Constitution, and designed a framework, in which government would not meddle in any of these areas.

The limited government approach of the American system simply did not, and legally still does not, allow federal bureaucrats to take an industry and turn it upside down on a whim.

Looking at it from a jaded perspective, it may hardly seem to matter. American manufacturing is suffering anyway; what’s one more industry stabbed in the back by its thoughtless government?

But looking at it another way, with an eye to history, and an eye to the Constitution that they all swore to uphold, this does matter, and it is in fact a perfect example of the key problem we suffer from today:

A thoughtless government, regulating by whim, without regard for the workers, communities, and investors who depend on the industries that this government attacks with abandon on a daily basis.

This continual illegal assault on the American economy must be stopped.

2022 is an election year. If everyone who has been stabbed in the back by this regime can only take off their blinders and realize how severely they have been wronged, the results will be unanimous.

But, unfortunately, that is a big if.

Copyright 2022 John F Di Leo

John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based trade compliance trainer and transportation manager, writer and actor. A one-time county chairman of the Milwaukee County Republican Party, he has been writing regularly for Illinois Review since 2009.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Miscellaneous; Politics
KEYWORDS: bidenharris; furnaces; globalwarming; recession
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1 posted on 06/15/2022 5:43:16 PM PDT by jfd1776
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To: jfd1776

I thought we wouldn’t need furnaces in a few years.


2 posted on 06/15/2022 5:46:11 PM PDT by Ken H (Trump /DeSantis)
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To: jfd1776

As BiXiden has caused the price of natural gas to double, I demand 200% efficient furnaces.


3 posted on 06/15/2022 5:53:05 PM PDT by Paladin2
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To: Paladin2

I’m sure AOC would agree.


4 posted on 06/15/2022 5:53:44 PM PDT by Paladin2
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To: jfd1776

And the madness continues....


5 posted on 06/15/2022 5:56:51 PM PDT by Inyo-Mono
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To: jfd1776
Never have we seen such an incompetent, irresponsible, incoherent regime.
6 posted on 06/15/2022 5:57:12 PM PDT by Bullish (Rot'sa ruk America. )
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To: jfd1776

One thing we must all keep in mind and constantly remind people of, is the fact that when they talk about removing carbon dioxide from our atmosphere, it’s not just carbon being dispensed with, it’s also oxygen.


7 posted on 06/15/2022 6:00:03 PM PDT by Disambiguator
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To: Disambiguator

They are all about sequestering the Carbon in YOUR body.


8 posted on 06/15/2022 6:05:10 PM PDT by Paladin2
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To: jfd1776

How much more efficiency would be gained?

The makers have been working diligently on efficiency since the 1970s.


9 posted on 06/15/2022 6:07:15 PM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: jfd1776

I saw two Bidenvilles from US 41 after visiting my dentist, who said my wisdom tooth was too far decayed and would have to be yanked by a oral surgeon.


10 posted on 06/15/2022 6:09:39 PM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: jfd1776

The ultimate goal is to make those items so expensive that ordinary people can not afford them. They will be forced to use electric heat.

Yet right now the Midwestern states are barely able to meet the demand for electricity. Imagine the results if a few million electric cars were to plug into the system tonight.

But our magnificent government will solve that problem before it goes out of control.


11 posted on 06/15/2022 6:09:45 PM PDT by old curmudgeon (There is no situation so bad that the federal government can not make worse.)
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To: jfd1776
My furnace

Where I live

No codes, no building dept, tiny government that leaves people alone.

12 posted on 06/15/2022 6:26:05 PM PDT by Pollard (If there's a question mark in the headline, the answer should always be No.)
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To: jfd1776

new furnaces will be 150% efficient, deemed so...............


13 posted on 06/15/2022 6:30:56 PM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Pollard

A friend was discharged on disability from the Air Force. He had a housing allowance from Uncle Sam.

He fixed up his home with wood fired furnaces and “volunteered” to remove people’s trees after they were cut down.

He had so much firewood he didn’t have enough for it all. His house was never cold.


14 posted on 06/15/2022 6:35:35 PM PDT by packagingguy
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To: packagingguy

I want one someday. My neighbor has one that heats his water too. Of course that means he has to run it all year but it uses a tiny amount of wood in the summer.


15 posted on 06/15/2022 6:46:57 PM PDT by Pollard (If there's a question mark in the headline, the answer should always be No.)
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To: Bullish

I don’t agree. I think this is all entirely on purpose.


16 posted on 06/15/2022 6:55:42 PM PDT by Sarcazmo ("Sarcasm is the highest form of wit" ~ O. Wilde)
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To: Bullish

I don’t agree. I think this is all entirely on purpose.


17 posted on 06/15/2022 6:55:42 PM PDT by Sarcazmo ("Sarcasm is the highest form of wit" ~ O. Wilde)
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To: jfd1776

.


18 posted on 06/15/2022 7:11:55 PM PDT by sauropod (It's too bad all the people who know how to run the country are busy cutting hair.)
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To: jfd1776

Been heating with wood for 46 years.
Haven’t been cold yet.


19 posted on 06/15/2022 7:14:08 PM PDT by sasquatch
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To: jfd1776

This dumb proposal won’t go into effect until 2029. I’ll likely be dead by then but I bought an efficient furnace some years ago so I’m not affected.

What’s screwy is they admit the cost savings due to increased efficiency are $100 or so a year yet the more efficent furnaces cost more than $2,000 so given the life of an average furnace of 15 years they will never paay back their original premium.

If there is a benefit it is entirely on the incremental less CO2 between 80 and 95% efficiencies. It is a tax on gas furnaces to reduce CO2.


20 posted on 06/15/2022 7:15:08 PM PDT by JeanLM
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