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California is investing a half-billion dollars to decarbonize homes for low-income households
(www.quittingcarbonmedia.com)
Discussion of climate, how it is changing, activism around that, the politics, and the energy systems change we need in order to stabilize things.
As a starting point, the burning of fossil fuels, and to a lesser extent deforestation and release of methane are responsible for the warming in recent decades:

How much each change to the atmosphere has warmed the world:

Recommended actions to cut greenhouse gas emissions in the near future:

Anti-science, inactivism, and unsupported conspiracy theories are not ok here.
As a german its so crazy to me, that so many people still use gas. Especially with their cheap (although fossil) gas prices. Good for californians to finally get electric appliances and induction stoves :))
Gas is better for most of the cooking I like to do and lots of induction stoves have coil whine I can't tolerate.
I like gas for certain types of cooking, especially those that involve actively flipping things in the pan. And even when I switch to induction some day, I'll still have my outdoor pizza oven, charcoal/wood grill, and, if I'm not gonna have gas indoors, probably a gas wok burner.
For anything involving wet heat (boiling, blanching, braising, steaming), anything involving the oven, and even deep frying, I'm looking to switch eventually. But for now, I do enjoy cooking on gas.
Yeah but it's becoming more and more apparent this is like sticking to your asbestos wall panels because they're fireproof
For me the main benefit is the ability to still feed yourself if the power goes out for any length of time, and heat your house if it's in winter.
Otherwise you are eating cold canned beans and freezing. Power goes out fairly frequently at my place. We could electrify and install a backup generator but then you are still using gas just a different kind.
Could always have a small camp/hiking stove for the odd power outage.
That seems like a clear and obvious niche scenario. The majority of the US does not have frequent power outages and the majority of the US would be wiser to go to Solar (or wind locally) than get a backup generator (and that only gets more true every year). I only say this because I wish people creating minor social friction to the movement, like your comment, would remove that friction with a small "I know this is a niche scenario but..."
Yep. I’m in an apartment with all electric now, but the city had a massive snow storm and power outage that lasted a week 3-4 years ago. 30-40 people died. The roads were so bad it was illegal to try and drive (travel ban) so a lot of people ended up freezing to death. I’m fortunate enough to have both a 23000 btu kerosene heater for emergencies and do a lot of camping so butane stove canisters for days, but all electric still has its downsides.