For several years the U.S. Department of Energy has been promoting the use of induction for home cooking. Conventional residential cooking tops typically use gas or resistance electric heating elements, (the ubiquitous coil) to heat food. The government estimates that gas stoves are approximately 32% efficient in their energy use and electric stoves are 75-80% efficient. Residential induction burners consist of an electromagnetic coil that creates a magnetic field when turned on. Compatible cookware is heated when it is within the magnetic according to the DOE induction cooking 85% efficient. Less heat is lost to the surrounding air, providing an additional energy efficiency benefit by reducing the workload for air conditioning equipment. A cooler cooking top surface also makes induction cook tops safer to work with than other types of cooking tops. Finally, because the cookware itself is the source of heat, it reaches desired temperatures more quickly and provides faster cook times.
I had always dreamed of a kitchen with a commercial or
commercial style stove. When I had saved up the money to upgrade my kitchen, I
realized that the kitchen centerpiece stove was not my best choice. First of
all, it is a warming world and those stove throw off lots of heat, second I live in a rural area where natural gas
(methane) is not available, instead we have a propane tank and third commercial
stoves are simply not good at low simmer, my preferred cooking style. I make
lots of sauces, gravy, stews and soups. Gas burners (especially propane with
its three carbons) burn too hot. So, in 2018 when I updated my kitchen I
installed an induction cook top. I have been amazingly happy with that choice. The
cooking is all I had hoped. What I had not anticipated is how easy and fast it
is to clean, and the bad kitty cannot accidentally turn it on.
Now scientists are taking a closer look at cooking with gas.
Natural gas is a popular fuel choice for home cooking and has always been considered
better than conventional electric. It has the reputation that “real cooks” use
natural gas. Nationally, over 40 million homes (about a third) cook with gas. Natural
gas appliances release methane and other pollutants through leaks and
incomplete combustion. These appliances warm the planet in two ways: generating
carbon dioxide by burning natural gas as a fuel and leaking unburned methane
into the air. A recent Stanford University study found that the methane leaking from natural gas-burning stoves emit up to 1.3 % of the gas they use as unburned methane.
According to the U.S. EPA, methane is the second most
prevalent greenhouse gas and accounted for about 10% of all U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions from human activities. Methane is emitted by natural sources such as
wetlands and the breakdown of organic material, as well as from leakage from
natural gas systems, growing rice, waste disposal and the raising of livestock. Methane
is a powerful greenhouse gas and is 25 times more effective than carbon dioxide
at trapping heat over a 100-year period. While it does occur naturally, major
human-generated sources include landfills, refineries, oil and gas fields,
natural gas infrastructure, dairies and wastewater treatment plants.
This work came out of Dr. Jackson’s lab at Stanford
University where they are working to measure and reduce greenhouse gas
emissions through the Global Carbon Project (globalcarbonproject.org), which
Jackson chairs. Some of their work is directly aimed at measuring and reducing
methane emissions from oil and gas wells, city streets, and homes and
buildings. According to Dr. Jackson and his colleagues, curbing methane
emissions will require reducing fossil fuel use and controlling fugitive
emissions such as leaks from pipelines and wells, as well as changes to the way
we feed cattle, grow rice and eat. “We’ll need to eat less meat and reduce
emissions associated with cattle and rice farming,” Dr. Jackson said, “and
replace oil and natural gas in our cars and homes.”
The scientists measured methane and nitrogen oxides released
in 53 homes in California- not the biggest of sample. Their sample group included
18 brands of gas cooktops and stoves ranging in age from 3 to 30 years old .Measurements
were taken during combustion, ignition, extinguishment, and also while the
appliance was off.
The scientist found no relationship between the age or cost
of a stove and its emissions. What they did find that more than three-quarters
of methane emissions occurred while stoves were off, suggesting that gas
fittings and connections to the stove and in-home gas lines are responsible for
most emissions, regardless of how much the stove is used. They should have
probably examined the age of the interior piping and fittings in the home, but
that was not part of the study. California does not require a building permit when
you replace gas appliances the way we do here. So the fittings in California
are not tested regularly over time.
The scientists found the highest emitters were cooktops that
used a pilot light instead of a built-in electronic sparker. Methane emissions
from the puffs of gas emitted while igniting and extinguishing a burner were on
average equivalent to the amount of unburned methane emitted during about 10
minutes of cooking with the burner.
Larger stoves (those trophy kitchen appliances )tended to
emit higher rates of nitric oxides. The scientists estimated that people who
don’t use their range hoods or who have poor ventilation can surpass the EPA’s
guidelines for 1-hour exposure to nitrogen dioxide outdoors (there are no
indoor standards) within a few minutes of stove usage, particularly in smaller
kitchens.
Dr. Jackson encourages switching to electric stoves to cut
greenhouse gas emissions and indoor air pollution. I switched to induction to
get fabulous cooking, easy cleanup and energy efficiency. I maintain propane in
my home to power my backup generator, a propane furnace, a gas fireplace (I'm thinking about it) and hot water heater. Without
electricity I have no water-my well pump does not work, my air heat pumps do
not work, and all my kitchen appliances and freezer go down. We have lost power for several days after a storm in the winter and once in the summer. Because I have
the generator and backup systems, my
pipes did not burst, my septic pump continued to operate and life went on.
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