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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 16, 2004
CONTACT:
Andrew deLaski, 617-363-9470
On Energy-Saving Standards, States Lead, DOE Lags
CA and NJ Advance New Appliance Energy Efficiency
Standards
In DC, U.S. DOE Announces New Delays in National Furnace and
other Standards
Boston, MA -- A coalition group today praised the states
of California and New Jersey for advancing new energy-saving appliance
standards this week. Meanwhile, in Washington, U.S. DOE announced
yet another round of delays for new national standards for natural
gas furnaces and other products.
"The states are leading the way," said Andrew deLaski, Executive
Director of the Appliance Standards Awareness Project. "California's
and New Jersey's new standards will cut energy waste, save consumers
and businesses money and reduce pollution starting as soon as 2006."
On Wednesday, the California Energy Commission set new energy
efficiency standards for 17 different products ranging from light
bulbs to swimming pool pumps to small power supplies for electronics
(a.k.a. "energy vampires" or "wall warts"). According to the Energy
Commission, the new standards will reduce energy costs for California
businesses and consumers by more than $3 billion over fifteen years
and will eliminate the need for three new power plants within ten
years.
"At their full effectiveness, these standards will save enough
energy to power all the homes in San Francisco and eliminate global
warming carbon pollution equivalent to taking 320,000 cars off the
road," stated Noah Horowitz, Senior Scientist at the Natural Resources
Defense Council.
In New Jersey, the State Senate on Monday approved legislation
passed by the Assembly last spring that will establish standards
for 8 products including commercial refrigerators, exit signs and
commercial clothes washers. Final passage and approval by the Acting
Governor (who voted for the bill in his capacity as a state senator)
is expected in January. Earlier this year, Maryland and Connecticut
passed laws establishing energy saving standards for nine and eight
products, respectively.
But in Washington, long-overdue national efficiency standards
have stalled. On Monday, the U.S. Department of Energy announced
an additional two year delay for new standards slated for natural
gas and oil furnaces and boilers and a new two-and-a-half year delay
for commercial air conditioners and electric distribution transformers.
"With natural gas prices at record highs and the memory of regional
blackouts still fresh, state policymakers recognize that saving
energy is a top priority," said Steven Nadel, Executive Director,
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy. "But at DOE, the
cycle of delays gets worse every year."
DOE first named upgrades to the 1987 home furnace standard and
the 1992 commercial air conditioner standard "high priorities" in
2001, but each year announces a new delay. The latest means DOE
will not finish new standards until late 2007. They would not go
into effect until 2010 to 2016. By law, the new national furnace
standard was due in 1994. According to a September report published
by deLaski's and Nadel's groups, each year of delay in these three
national standards locks in $7.1 billion in higher energy costs
for consumers and businesses.
The new standards established by California, Maryland, Connecticut
and pending final approval in New Jersey all address products not
covered by federal standards. Absent a special waiver from U.S.
DOE, states are prohibited from establishing their own standards
for products covered by federal standards no matter how outdated
these standards have become.
"If the Feds can't or won't act on these common sense solutions
to our energy woes, then, at least they should get out of the way"
said Rob Sargent, Senior Energy Policy Analyst for the National
Association of State Public Interest Research Groups.
# # #
For the CEC press release, see: http://www.energy.ca.gov/releases.
For more information on the new California standards: Noah Horowitz,
NRDC, 415-875-6100 or see his statement at http://www.nrdc.org/media/#1215eff.
For more information on New Jersey standards: Emily Rusch, NJ PIRG,
267-240-4336.
For more information on DOE rules: Steven Nadel, ACEEE, 202-429-8873
or Andrew deLaski, ASAP, 617-363-9470.
About ASAP: The Appliance Standards Awareness Project is
a coalition group dedicated to advancing cost-effective energy efficiency
standards for appliances and equipment. ASAP works at both the state
and federal levels and is led by a Steering Committee with representatives
from consumer groups, utilities, state government, environmental
groups, and energy efficiency groups. For information about ASAP,
contact ASAP, 20 Belgrade Avenue, Suite 7, Boston, MA 02131 or visit
http://standardsASAP.org.
About ACEEE: The American Council for an Energy-Efficient
Economy is an independent, nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing
energy efficiency as a means of promoting both economic prosperity
and environmental protection. For information about ACEEE and its
programs and publications, contact ACEEE, 1001 Connecticut Avenue,
N.W., Suite 801, Washington, DC 20036-5525 or visit http://aceee.org.
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