Home appliance manufacturers and energy efficiency advocates have agreed to improved efficiency standards and tax policies for refrigerators, freezers, clothes washers, clothes dryers, dishwashers, and room air conditioners.
This agreement could save enough energy to meet the total energy needs of 40% of American homes for one year, and the amount of water necessary to meet the current water needs of every customer in the City of Los Angeles for 25 years. Global warming CO2 will be reduced by 550 million metric tons over the same time period, without considering the emissions reductions from smart appliances.
Major home appliance manufacturers, their trade organization, and a nationwide coalition of energy and water efficiency supporters have called for new national minimum efficiency standards, production tax credits for super-efficient appliances, and inclusion of “smart grid” readiness as a feature of future
Energy Star-qualified appliances.
Appliance manufactures and efficiency advocates will pursue adoption of these recommendations through administrative action by the
Department of Energy and through legislative action by Congress.
Here are some of the details:
- The recommended new standards will reduce new refrigerator and freezer energy use by up to 30% by January 2014.
- For top loading clothes washers, 26% energy savings and 16% water savings would kick in for 2015 relative to current standards, increasing to 37% energy and water savings in 2018.
- For front loading clothes washers, the savings will be 43% for energy and 52% for water in 2015 compared to today’s standards.
- Clothes dryers will increase in efficiency by 5% in 2015. In addition, changes to the dryer test procedure will reduce over-drying, saving additional energy and extending the life of clothes.
- Room air conditioners will see a 10–15% increase in efficiency effective June 2014
- Dishwashers will see 14% energy savings and 23% water savings beginning in January 2013.
For a typical household, products just meeting the new standards would cut their total electric bill by about 6% relative to products just meeting the current standards. Based on analysis by ACEEE, the net total national benefits for consumers for products purchased through 2030 will reach nearly $30 billion. ACEEE analysis shows that estimated upfront cost increases to make products more efficient will pay back in lower energy bills well within the life of the affected products, often within just a few years.
Additional key features of the agreement include:
- Support for a three-year extension and update of an existing manufacturers' tax credit for the production of super-efficient clothes washers, dishwashers, refrigerators and freezers. Products that would qualify for the tax incentive significantly exceed the federal minimum efficiency requirements, thereby accelerating and increasing energy and water savings.
- A planned petition to the Energy Star program to provide a 5% credit to the required energy levels for smart appliances. Smart appliances will help consumers save money and energy with features that allow appliance operation to adjust in reaction to dynamic pricing while allowing the consumer to ultimately have full control of when and how an appliance operates.
- Recommendations that DOE improve test methods for dryers and refrigerators to better represent actual product energy use. These changes will create additional incentives for manufacturers to reduce product energy use.
The agreement was signed by major appliance manufacturing members of the
Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers (AHAM) and by major energy and water efficiency organizations, consumer groups, and environmental organizations including the
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE),
Alliance for Water Efficiency,
Alliance to Save Energy,
Appliance Standards Awareness Project,
Consumer Federation of America,
National Consumer Law Center,
Natural Resources Defense Council,
Northwest Power and Conservation Council, and
Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnerships.
Additional details on the agreement and a chart depicting the energy and water savings, and reduced carbon dioxide emissions can be found at
AHAM.
Photo courtesy Fisher & Paykel