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This little-known ‘dark roof' lobby may be making your city hotter
This little-known ‘dark roof' lobby may be making your city hotter

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

This little-known ‘dark roof' lobby may be making your city hotter

It began with a lobbyist's pitch. Tennessee Rep. Rusty Grills says a lobbyist proposed a simple idea: repeal the state's requirement for reflective roofs on many commercial buildings. In late March, Grills and his fellow lawmakers voted to eliminate the rule, scrapping a measure meant to save energy, lower temperatures and protect Tennesseans from extreme heat. It was another win for a well-organized lobbying campaign led by manufacturers of dark roofing materials. Industry representatives called the rollback in Tennessee a needed correction as more of the state moved into a hotter climate zone, expanding the reach of the state's cool-roof rule. Critics, including a Democratic Tennessee lawmaker and a Washington, D.C., pastor, called it dangerous and 'deceptive.' 'The new law will lead to higher energy costs and greater heat-related illnesses and deaths,' state Rep. Harold Love and the Rev. Jon Robinson wrote in a statement. It will, they warned, make Nashville, Memphis, and other cities hotter — particularly in underserved Black and Latino communities, where many struggle to pay their utility bills. Similar lobbying has played out in Denver, Baltimore and at the national level. Industry groups have questioned the decades-old science behind cool roofs, downplayed the benefits and warned of reduced choice and unintended consequences. 'A one-size-fits-all approach doesn't consider climate variation across different regions,' wrote Ellen Thorp, the executive director of the EPDM Roofing Association, which represents an industry built primarily on dark materials. But the weight of the scientific evidence is clear: On hot days, light-colored roofs can stay more than 50 degrees cooler than dark ones, helping cut energy use, curb greenhouse gas emissions and reduce heat-related illnesses and deaths. One recent study found that reflective roofs could have saved the lives of more than 240 people who died in London's 2018 heatwave. At least eight states — and more than a dozen cities in other states — have adopted cool-roof requirements, according to the Smart Surfaces Coalition, a national group of public health and environmental groups that promote reflective roofs, trees and other solutions to make cities healthier. Just months ago, industry representatives lobbied successfully against expanding cool roof recommendations in national energy efficiency codes — the standards that many cities and states use to set building regulations. Thorp has said the goal is to emphasize 'holistic' roofing solutions. Critics say it's about protecting profits. The stakes are high. As global temperatures rise and heat waves grow more deadly, the roofs over our heads have become battlefields in a consequential climate war. It's happening at a time when the Trump administration and Congress are derailing measures designed to make appliances and buildings more energy efficient. In March, for instance, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development delayed compliance deadlines for federally financed new homes to meet updated energy-efficiency standards. The principle is simple: Light-colored roofs reflect sunlight, so buildings stay cooler. Dark ones absorb heat, driving up temperatures inside buildings and in the surrounding air. Roofs comprise up to one-fourth of the surface area of major U.S. cities, researchers say, so the color of roofs can make a big difference in urban areas. Just how hot can dark roofs get? 'You can physically burn your hands on these roofs,' said Bill Updike, who used to install solar panels and now works with the Smart Surfaces Coalition. Study after study has confirmed the benefits of light-colored roofs. They save energy, lower air conditioning bills and reduce city temperatures. They help prevent heat-related illnesses. And they typically cost no more than dark roofs. Retrofitting 80% of commercial roofs in the United States with cool roofs would cut the need for air conditioning, reducing carbon dioxide emissions by more than 6 million tons — equivalent to the annual emissions of 1.2 million cars, according to a 2009 study by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. A later study by the same laboratory found that a cool roof on a home in central California saved 20% in annual energy costs. In a three-story rowhouse in Baltimore, Owen Henry discovered what a difference a cool roof can make. Living in a part of the city with few trees — and where summer temperatures often climb into the 90s — Henry wanted to trim his power bills and stay cooler while working in his third-floor office. So in 2023, he used $100 worth of white reflective roof paint to coat his roof. Henry said he and his wife immediately saw the indoor temperature drop. They reduced their electricity use by 24%. 'For us, it made a huge difference,' he said. Known for its durability, a black synthetic rubber known as EPDM once dominated commercial roofing. But in recent years it has been surpassed by TPO, a plastic single-ply material which is typically white and is better suited to meet the growing demand for reflective roofs. Leading EPDM manufacturers — including Johns Manville, Carlisle SynTec and Elevate, a division of the Swiss multinational company Holcim — have fought against regulations that threaten to further diminish their market share. Kurt Shickman, former executive director of the Global Cool Cities Alliance, said those companies have the money to hire top-notch lobbyists who know their way around hearing rooms — and who are on a first-name basis with decision makers. 'It's just been a real challenge to fight these battles,' he said of his group's struggles with the EPDM industry. '...We're dealing with huge entrenched interests here.' The EPDM industry has paid for research that has asserted that the impact of cool-roof mandates is inconclusive, and that insulation plays a bigger role in saving energy than cool roofs. They've also argued that cool roofs can contribute to condensation and mold. Target tested that theory on more than two dozen cool roofs installed on its stores and found no evidence of it. In an emailed response to Floodlight's questions, Thorp argued that many of the studies cited to support cool roof mandates leave out important factors, such as local climate variations, roof type, tree canopy and insulation thickness. And she pointed to a recent study by Harvard researchers who concluded that white roofs and pavements may reduce precipitation, causing temperatures to unexpectedly increase in surrounding regions. But Haider Taha, a leading expert on urban heat, identified multiple flaws in the Harvard study. In a review, he and a fellow researcher said it relied on unrealistic assumptions and oversimplified models, while ignoring key features of real-world cities. As a result, Taha and his colleague wrote, 'the study's conclusions fail to provide actionable insights for urban cooling strategies or policymaking.' When Baltimore debated a cool roof ordinance in 2022, Thorp's group and the Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association (ARMA) lobbied hard against it, arguing that dark roofs are the most efficient choice in 'northern climates like Baltimore.' In cold climates, industry representatives note, cool roofs can lead to higher winter heating bills. 'Current research does not support the adoption of cool roofs as a measure that will achieve improved energy efficiency or reduced urban heat island,' Thorp wrote in a letter to one council member. 'Increased insulation and improved urban tree canopy are the only measures that are broadly supported in the literature to achieve these goals.' Multiple studies show otherwise. They've concluded that reflective roofs do save energy and cool cities by easing the 'urban heat island effect' — the extra heat that gets trapped in many city neighborhoods because buildings and pavement soak up the sun. Researchers have also found that even in most cold North American climates, the energy savings from cool roofs during warmer months outweighs any added heating costs in the winter. Despite the opposition, Baltimore passed a cool-roof ordinance in 2023. City Council member Mark Conway said he wasn't surprised to see an industry trying to protect its business. But it was his job, he said, 'to think about the greater good.' Some who live in Baltimore's lower-income neighborhoods can't afford air conditioning, he said. And for them, Conway said, the reduced temperatures brought by cool roofs 'can be life-changing.' Opponents of cool roof requirements like Baltimore's say they oversimplify a complex issue. In an email to Floodlight, ARMA Executive Vice President Reed Hitchcock said such rules aren't a 'magic bullet.' He encouraged regulators to consider a 'whole building approach' — one that weighs insulation, shading and climate in addition to roof color to preserve design flexibility and consumer choice. Henry, the Baltimore homeowner, said he thinks the city's ordinance will help all residents. 'Everyone has to do a little bit in order for it to make a big difference,' he said. 'And phooey to any manufacturer that's going to try and stop us from maintaining our community and making it a pleasant place to live.' Elsewhere, the industry's lobbyists have notched victories. In Denver, EPDM advocates waged a letter-writing campaign in 2015 that helped lead to the defeat of a cool-roof proposal. A narrower cool-roof ordinance, which applied only to new roofs on commercial buildings 25,000 square feet or larger, ultimately passed three years later, despite more opposition from the industry. At the national level, Thorp's group spoke out against a proposed code change that would have expanded standards for reflective roofs into cooler climates. The American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) — a professional organization that creates such standards — rejected the proposed change. The standards that ASHRAE sets are used as models for city and state regulations. The current ASHRAE standard recommends reflective roofs on commercial buildings in U.S. climate zones 1, 2, and 3 — the country's hottest regions. Those include most of the South, Hawaii, almost all of Texas, areas along the Mexican border and most of California. But, Thorp said in a recent interview, 'We've been able to stop all of those … mandates from creeping into climate zone 4 and 5.' Another group headed by Thorp — the Coalition for Sustainable Roofing — worked with the lobbyist to propose the bill that eliminated Tennessee's cool-roof requirement. That rule once applied to commercial buildings in just 14 of the state's 95 counties, but an update to climate maps in 2021 expanded the requirements to 20 more counties, including its most populous urban area — Nashville. Grills, the Republican lawmaker who introduced the bill, was sold on the proposal to kill the regulation. 'At the end of the day,' he told Floodlight, 'the consumer should be the one driving what they purchase, not regulatory agencies.' At a state Senate committee meeting, Thorp called the bill 'simply a fix, not quite administrative, but almost.' The change was anything but administrative, the bill's opponents say. It will put children, senior citizens and other vulnerable people at risk, said Love, the Nashville Democrat, and Robinson, the D.C. pastor who leads Metropolitan AME Church. 'That's not a 'fix' worth supporting,' they wrote in their opinion piece. EPDM manufacturers also make light-colored roofing materials. Those include TPO and a white EPDM, which is typically more expensive — and much less commonly used — than its black counterpart. Why, then, are manufacturers resisting cool-roof regulations? Brian Whelan, a consultant who advises roofing manufacturing companies on environmentally sustainable practices and products, said the industry has invested heavily in building factories and production lines that produce dark roofing materials — and they're reluctant to let that business go. 'They are kind of fed up with losing market share,' Whelan said. EPDM manufacturers don't publicly disclose how much of their business comes from dark versus reflective roofing, or the profit margins from each. But based on market intelligence, Whelan said, commercial roofing manufacturers likely make more money per square foot selling EPDM than TPO. Part of the reason: EPDM systems typically include high-margin accessories — like seam tapes and sealants — that aren't necessary with TPO. Greg Kats, CEO of the Smart Surfaces Coalition, dismisses many of the industry's claims as disinformation. 'Those sorts of arguments are familiar to people who watch what went on in the smoking industry, the claims that there's no correlation between smoking and cancer,' he said. Even the name of one of Thorp's lobbying groups — the Coalition for Sustainable Roofing — is misleading, Kats contends. A more accurate name, he said, would be 'the Coalition to Prevent Cities from Protecting their Citizens, Cutting Energy Bills and Making Cities Resilient.' Kats said the stakes are highest in low-income neighborhoods. He pointed to research conducted in Baltimore showing that poor communities are typically far hotter than affluent neighborhoods on a summer day, due to differences in tree and pavement cover. The public may be more receptive to cool roof policies than industry lobbyists suggest. Polls show many Americans support energy-efficiency measures. Brian Spear, a homeowner in Tempe, Arizona, is among them. He's lived in the Phoenix area since the 1980s, back when there were fewer than 30 days a year when the temperature reached 110 degrees. Last year, there were 70 of those days — the highest on record — followed only by 2023, when there were 55 days of 110 degrees plus. These days, summer mornings start out scorching, he says, 'and I feel like if you go outside between 10 and 4, it's dangerous.' Spear says he'll soon replace the aging roof on an Airbnb home that he owns. After weighing the usual concerns — cost and aesthetics — he has chosen a roof that he believes will help rather than harm: a gray metal roof with a reflective coating. 'If someone told me you couldn't put a dark roof on your house … I'd understand,' he said. 'I'm all about it being for the common good.' Even as mayors around the country seek to make their cities more livable, Kats believes the dark roofing industry will continue to resist. Many of us have felt the sting of laying our hands on a dark car roof — or walking barefoot on black pavement — in the summer heat. Yet, Kats says, the dark roofing industry has pushed a message that boils down to this: 'You shouldn't be trusting your experience, your senses.' Floodlight is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates the powerful interests stalling climate action.

How the little-known ‘dark roof' lobby may be making US cities hotter
How the little-known ‘dark roof' lobby may be making US cities hotter

The Guardian

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • The Guardian

How the little-known ‘dark roof' lobby may be making US cities hotter

It began with a lobbyist's pitch. Tennessee representative Rusty Grills says the lobbyist proposed a simple idea: repeal the state's requirement for reflective roofs on many commercial buildings. In late March, Grills and his fellow lawmakers voted to eliminate the rule, scrapping a measure meant to save energy, lower temperatures and protect Tennesseans from extreme heat. Grills, a Republican, told Floodlight that he introduced the bill to give consumers more choice. It was another win for a well-organized lobbying campaign led by manufacturers of dark roofing materials. Industry representatives called the rollback in Tennessee a needed correction as more of the state moved into a hotter climate zone, expanding the reach of the state's cool-roof rule. Critics called it dangerous and 'deceptive'. 'The new law will lead to higher energy costs and greater heat-related illnesses and deaths,' state representative Harold Love and the Rev. Jon Robinson said in a statement. It will, critics warned, make Nashville, Memphis, and other cities hotter – particularly in underserved Black and Latino communities, where many struggle to pay their utility bills. Similar lobbying has played out in Denver, Baltimore and at the national level. Industry groups have questioned the decades-old science behind cool roofs, downplayed the benefits and warned of reduced choice and unintended consequences. 'A one-size-fits-all approach doesn't consider climate variation across different regions,' wrote Ellen Thorp, the executive director of the EPDM Roofing Association, a DC-based national group which represents an industry built primarily on dark materials. But the weight of the scientific evidence is clear: on hot days, light-colored roofs can stay more than 50 degrees cooler than dark ones, helping cut energy use, curb greenhouse gas emissions and reduce heat-related illnesses and deaths. One recent study found that reflective roofs could have saved the lives of more than 240 people who died in London's 2018 heatwave. At least eight states – and more than a dozen cities in other states – have adopted cool-roof requirements, according to the Smart Surfaces Coalition, a national group of public health and environmental groups that promote reflective roofs, trees and other solutions to make cities healthier. Industry representatives lobbied successfully in recent months against expanding cool roof recommendations in national professional energy efficiency codes – the standards that many cities and states use to set building regulations. The stakes are high. As global temperatures rise and heat waves grow more deadly, the roofs over our heads have become battlefields in a consequential climate war. It's happening as the Trump administration and Congress move to derail measures designed to make appliances and buildings more energy efficient. The principle is simple: light-colored roofs reflect sunlight, so buildings stay cooler. Dark ones absorb heat, driving up temperatures inside buildings and in the surrounding air. Roofs comprise up to one-fourth of the surface area of major US cities, researchers say, so the color of roofs can make a big difference in urban areas. Just how hot can dark roofs get? 'You can physically burn your hands on these roofs,' said Bill Updike, who used to install solar panels and now works for the Smart Surfaces Coalition. Study after study has confirmed the benefits of light-colored roofs. They save energy, lower air conditioning bills and reduce city temperatures. They help prevent heat-related illnesses. And they typically cost no more than dark roofs. A study by the US Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory found that a cool roof on a home in central California saved 20% in annual energy costs. In a three-story rowhouse in Baltimore, Owen Henry discovered what a difference a cool roof can make. Living in a part of the city with few trees – and where summer temperatures often climb into the 90s – Henry wanted to trim his power bills and stay cooler while working in his third-floor office. So in 2023, he used $100 worth of white reflective roof paint to coat his roof. Henry said he and his wife immediately saw the indoor temperature drop. They reduced their electricity use – by 24%. Known for its durability, a black synthetic rubber known as EPDM once dominated commercial roofing. But in recent years it has been surpassed by TPO, a plastic single-ply material which is typically white and is better suited to meet the growing demand for reflective roofs. Leading EPDM manufacturers – including Johns Manville, Carlisle SynTec and Elevate, a division of the Swiss multinational company Holcim – also make reflective roofing materials. But they have fought against regulations that threaten to further diminish their market share. In an emailed response to Floodlight's questions, Thorp argued that many of the studies cited to support cool roof mandates leave out important factors, such as local climate variations, roof type, tree canopy and insulation thickness. And she pointed to a recent study by Harvard researchers who concluded that white roofs and pavements may reduce precipitation, causing temperatures to unexpectedly increase in surrounding regions. But Haider Taha, a leading expert on urban heat, identified flaws in the Harvard study, stating: 'The study's conclusions fail to provide actionable insights for urban cooling strategies or policymaking.' When Baltimore debated a cool roof ordinance in 2022, Thorp's group and the Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association (ARMA) lobbied hard against it, arguing that dark roofs are the most efficient choice in 'northern climates like Baltimore'. In cold climates, industry representatives note, cool roofs can lead to higher winter heating bills. 'Current research does not support the adoption of cool roofs as a measure that will achieve improved energy efficiency or reduced urban heat island,' Thorp wrote in a letter to one council member. Multiple studies show otherwise. They've concluded that reflective roofs do save energy and cool cities by easing the 'urban heat island effect' – the extra heat that gets trapped in many city neighborhoods because buildings and pavement soak up the sun. Researchers have also found that even in most cold North American climates, the energy savings from cool roofs during warmer months outweighs any added heating costs in the winter. Despite the opposition, Baltimore passed a cool-roof ordinance in 2023. Opponents of cool roof requirements like Baltimore's say they oversimplify a complex issue. In an email to Floodlight, ARMA executive vice-president Reed Hitchcock said such rules aren't a 'magic bullet'. He encouraged regulators to consider a 'whole building approach' – one that weighs insulation, shading and climate in addition to roof color to preserve design flexibility and consumer choice. Henry, the Baltimore homeowner, said he thinks the city's ordinance will help all residents. 'Phooey to any manufacturer that's going to try and stop us from maintaining our community and making it a pleasant place to live,' he said. Elsewhere, the industry's lobbyists have notched victories. They lobbied successfully to water down a cool-roof ordinance in Denver and to block stricter standards by the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) – a professional organization that creates model standards for city and state regulations. The current ASHRAE standard recommends reflective roofs on commercial buildings in US climate zones 1, 2 and 3 — the country's hottest regions. Those include most of the south, Hawaii, almost all of Texas, areas along the Mexican border and most of California. Said Thorp in a recent interview, 'We've been able to stop all of those … mandates from creeping into climate zone 4 and 5.' Another group headed by Thorp – the Coalition for Sustainable Roofing – worked with the lobbyist to propose the bill that eliminated Tennessee's cool-roof requirement. That rule once applied to commercial buildings in just 14 of the state's 95 counties, but an update to climate maps in 2021 expanded the requirements to 20 more counties, including its most populous urban area – Nashville. Brian Spear, a homeowner in Tempe, Arizona, has lived in the Phoenix area since the 1980s, back when there were fewer than 30 days a year when the temperature reached 110F. Last year, there were 70 of those days – the highest on record — followed only by 2023, when there were 55 days of 110F plus. These days, summer mornings start out scorching, he says, 'and I feel like if you go outside between 10am and 4pm, it's dangerous.' Spear says he'll soon replace the aging roof on an Airbnb home that he owns. After weighing the usual concerns – cost and aesthetics – he has chosen a surface that he believes will help rather than harm: a gray metal roof with a reflective coating. 'If someone told me you couldn't put a dark roof on your house … I'd understand,' he said. 'I'm all about it being for the common good.' Floodlight is a nonprofit newsroom that partners with local and national outlets to investigate the powerful interests stalling climate action. Read the full version of this story here

‘An embarrassment': Tennessee House Republican reacts to Nashville's sanctuary city label by DHS
‘An embarrassment': Tennessee House Republican reacts to Nashville's sanctuary city label by DHS

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

‘An embarrassment': Tennessee House Republican reacts to Nashville's sanctuary city label by DHS

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — A Tennessee House Republican called the Department of Homeland Security's declaration that Nashville and Shelby County are sanctuary jurisdictions 'an embarrassment' and 'a shame.' DHS included Nashville and Shelby County on its list of sanctuary jurisdictions, which was 'created to identify sanctuary jurisdictions, which are determined by factors like compliance with federal law enforcement, information restrictions, and legal protections for illegal aliens,' according to DHS. Rep. Rusty Grills (R-Newbern) called the label 'sad.' Homeland Security identifies Nashville as sanctuary city 'It's a slap in the face to the rest of Tennessee when you have a mayor or city alderman and Nashville Metro that are trying to circumvent federal law. That's not the way Tennessee operates,' Grills said. 'We operate by rules and regulations, and we obey the laws. When you have a mayor who's gone rogue, that's a problem.' Under state law, it's a felony to enact sanctuary city policies. DHS's new declaration that Nashville and Shelby County are sanctuary jurisdictions raises questions about whether the municipalities are in violation of that state law. Grills argues they are. 'Anytime you have someone that's helping a group of people break the law, that's a problem, and I'm concerned when DHS has to come in and say, 'You know what, Tennessee, you've got two counties that are breaking the law.' That's an embarrassment and that's a shame,' Grills said. However, Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell told reporters Friday he isn't concerned about any potential charges or discoveries of wrongdoing. He questioned how DHS came up with the sanctuary jurisdiction label in the first place. 'I'm puzzled about what criteria they used to include Nashville,' O'Connell said. 'We are not and never have been a sanctuary city. If you look at the state law that defines a sanctuary city policy, there are six factors, and we do not and have not ever had a policy that violates any of those factors.' According to the state law, a sanctuary policy is defined as any rule that prevents state or local officials from working with federal immigration officers, limits sharing information about people's legal status, or blocks ICE from doing its job. 'Metro does not have any legal authority as it relates to immigration enforcement, and we do not impede federal law enforcement actions,' O'Connell said. However, Grills disagrees. ⏩ 'They want to protect criminals, they want to protect rapists, they want to protect murderers, and it's obvious they're willing to create GoFundMe accounts so they can help people that are in this country illegally circumvent the law, that's a problem,' Grills said. Tennessee Congressman Andy Ogles called for a Congressional investigation to uncover any potential wrongdoing by O'Connell. That investigation has begun. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Bill shielding chemical companies from civil lawsuits shelved for 2025
Bill shielding chemical companies from civil lawsuits shelved for 2025

Yahoo

time09-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Bill shielding chemical companies from civil lawsuits shelved for 2025

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — A bill that would shield pesticide companies from civil liability has been punted to next year by the Senate. The controversial bill by Sen. John Stevens (R-Huntingdon) and Rep. Rusty Grills (R-Newbern) would prohibit people from filing civil suits against chemical companies if they are diagnosed with cancer caused by their products. PREVIOUS: Bill that could protect pesticide companies from lawsuits over labels progresses in House, Senate committees The products in question are primarily used by farmers to boost crop yields. Supporters of the measure argued the products come with warning labels already approved by the Environmental Protection Agency. Chemical giant Bayer-Monsanto has advocated for the measure in several states, including Tennessee. The state Senate approved the measure on a mostly party-line vote on April 3, though two Republicans opted to vote 'present' rather than for or against the measure. Representatives debated the bill in the House Judiciary Committee before ultimately punting the measure to the Second Calendar of 2026. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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