加速住宅电气化的五项关键许可变更

As more residents make the switch from gas to electric appliances, such as heat pump water heaters and heat pump HVAC systems, local permitting processes play an increasingly important role in determining how quickly and affordably these projects can move forward.

To better understand the challenges facing homeowners, contractors, and local jurisdictions, MCE partnered with Cadmus to study permitting barriers associated with residential electrification projects across California.

The study highlights a clear opportunity: while permitting is essential for safety and code compliance, inconsistent requirements and administrative hurdles can add time, cost, and uncertainty to electrification projects. Addressing these barriers can help communities accelerate building decarbonization goals while improving the customer experience.

Brandon Ewert

“Every delay in deploying clean electric technologies is a missed opportunity to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. If we fail to address these barriers, we'll make it harder and more expensive for residents to choose electrification, putting local and state climate targets further out of reach.”

What We Heard from Contractors and Permitting Staff

Interviews with contractors and local permitting professionals revealed that permitting requirements often vary significantly between jurisdictions. Even for similar heat pump projects, contractors may encounter different application forms, documentation requirements, review timelines, and inspection procedures depending on where the work is being performed.

This lack of consistency creates challenges for contractors operating across multiple jurisdictions. Additional administrative work increases project costs and can discourage participation in electrification programs, ultimately affecting residents seeking to upgrade their homes.

The study also found that uncertainty around permit requirements can lead to project delays. Contractors frequently spend additional time communicating with permitting offices, revising applications, or addressing unexpected requirements that emerge during plan review or inspection.

Key Barriers

Several common permitting barriers emerged throughout the research:

  • Inconsistent permitting requirements across jurisdictions.
  • Complex application processes that require extensive documentation.
  • Long review timelines that delay project completion.
  • Uncertainty around code interpretation, particularly for newer electrification technologies.
  • Additional costs associated with permitting, plan revisions, and multiple inspections.


While each jurisdiction faces unique constraints, these challenges were consistently identified as opportunities for improvement.

“The good news is that many of the permitting challenges identified in this study are solvable. Local governments, building departments, contractors, and all key players share a common goal: helping residents safely adopt cleaner technologies. By collaborating now to create more efficient and consistent permitting, we can accelerate electrification, reduce emissions, and better prepare our communities.”

Opportunities for Improvement

The study points to several strategies that could make residential electrification projects easier and more efficient while maintaining safety and compliance standards.

  • Standardized permitting processes can reduce confusion for contractors and applicants. Common application requirements, checklists, and guidance documents help streamline project submittals and reviews.
  • Clearer customer-facing resources can also reduce administrative burdens. When homeowners and contractors understand requirements upfront, applications are more likely to be complete and ready for review.
  • Improved coordination and training between permitting staff and industry professionals can help address evolving technologies and code requirements. As heat pump adoption grows, ongoing knowledge sharing will be critical for ensuring consistent implementation.
  • Finally, process modernization, including online application systems and digital inspections where appropriate, can help reduce administrative workload and shorten project timelines.

Working Together to Advance Electrification

The study makes it clear that permitting staff, contractors, program administrators, and local governments all play a vital role in accelerating residential electrification. By collaborating on practical improvements, jurisdictions can reduce unnecessary barriers while maintaining the safety, quality, and accountability that permitting provides.

In June, MCE hosted a webinar with Cadmus to share the study findings and engage building department staff, contractors, permit technicians, policymakers, and other stakeholders in identifying collaborative solutions to implement these recommendations across our service area. Participants discussed common challenges, opportunities for streamlining heat pump permitting, and strategies for creating more customer-friendly permitting processes.

Watch the Webinar

As electrification continues to expand throughout our communities, efficient permitting will be an important tool for helping residents access clean energy technologies. By simplifying processes, improving consistency, and strengthening collaboration across jurisdictions, projects can be completed faster, at lower costs, and with a smoother path toward a cleaner energy future.

Read the Study

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