My wife and I both had incidents in our parents homes with natural gas that shaped our concerns about the safety of natural gas.
"According to a 2020 report by the NFPA, households with electric stoves reported fires at a rate 2.6 times higher than those with gas stoves. Equally staggering, the death rate of electric-run households was 3.4 times higher than those with gas appliances — and the injury rate was nearly five times greater."
From the actual report: "Ranges or cooktops were involved in 61 percent of reported home cooking fires, 87 percent of cooking fire deaths, and 78 percent of cooking fire injuries. Households that used electric ranges showed a higher risk of cooking fires and associated losses than those using gas ranges."
"Although 60 percent of households cook with electricity four out of five (80 percent) ranges or cooktops involved in reported cooking fires were powered by electricity.
Population-based risks are shown below,
• The rate of reported fires per million households was 2.6 times higher with electric ranges.
• The civilian fire death rate per million households was 3.4 times higher with electric ranges.
• The civilian fire injury rate per million households was 4.8 times higher with electric ranges than in households using gas ranges.
• The average fire dollar loss per household was 3.8 times higher in households with electric ranges.
Some info from the report: "It is sometimes less obvious that an electric burner is turned on or is still hot than it is with gas burners. In addition, once turned off, it takes time for an electric burner to cool." They point to updated standards put in place in 2018 with electric ranges that will take a long enough time to filter through all the households (houses, condos, apartments, townhouses, duplexes, etc) so existing households have that risk even more.
**Data points for stats above are from 2014-2018 with the report reviewing of data from trends of 1980s, 1990s and earlier 2000s for risk factor changes.