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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, October 3, 2000
CONTACTS:
Andrew deLaski, ASAP, 617-363-9470 or
David Nemtzow, Alliance to Save Energy, 202-530-2217
Energy Department Air Conditioner Standards Fall
Short In Meeting Nation's Electricity Needs
PROPOSAL IS A STEP FORWARD BUT NOT ENOUGH,
SAYS COALITION, URGING SEC. RICHARDSON TO IMPROVE FINAL STANDARD
BOSTON; WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Following a summer of electricity
reliability problems and blackouts in a number of states, a coalition
of consumer and environmental groups, state government, and utilities
praised the Clinton Administration for proposing new air conditioner
and heat pump energy-efficiency standards today but said they fall
short.
"Secretary Bill Richardson deserves credit for seeing the potential
in new heat pump and air conditioner standards," said Andrew deLaski,
executive director of the Appliance Standards Awareness Project
(ASAP), the coalition group. "But the Administration proposal falls
well short of what's needed to lighten the load that air conditioning
puts on the nation's strained power systems and consumers' electricity
bills."
Air conditioners are the single largest contributor to peak electricity
demand. In many parts of the nation, notably California, New York
and Chicago, record peak demand has repeatedly brought the power
system to the brink of collapse and, in some instances, precipitated
outages. Consumers in the deregulated markets of Southern California
and southeastern New York have seen the cost of their electricity
skyrocket as demand has outstripped supply.
"California teetered on the edge of rolling power outages all
summer," said Commissioner Art Rosenfeld of the California Energy
Commission. "When the difference between keeping our lights and
computers on and blackouts can be a few hundred megawatts, we need
all the power savings we can get."
"We are at a critical point in our nation's energy policy, with
high prices and overloaded supply systems threatening our economic
health as well as the environment," said Alliance to Save Energy
President David Nemtzow.
"The Secretary has a golden opportunity to get this key policy
decision right. If he fails, we all lose."
ASAP ran a half-page newspaper ad last week featuring Richardson
in a pair of digitally inserted sunglasses headlined, "In the city
known for hot air, Bill Richardson has a cool idea." The ad notes
that a watered down standard as advocated by some manufacturers
would, in effect, force the American people to finance dozens of
expensive, polluting power plants to make up the difference.
The Administration proposes to increase the heat pump standard
by 30% to 13 Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio (SEER), but proposes
to increase the air conditioner standard by just 20% to 12 SEER.
Air conditioners sold today have an average SEER of 11; the current
minimum standard, set in 1987, is 10 SEER. (Heat pumps are very
similar to air conditioners except that they heat as well as cool
homes.)
"Anything less than a 30% improvement for both air conditioners
and heat pumps sells the nation short," said Howard Geller, executive
director of the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy,
a Washington-based energy policy group. ACEEE conducted an in-depth
economic evaluation of different standard levels earlier this year.
This analysis is available at http://www.standardsasap.org/acrpt.htm.
According to ACEEE's analysis, the shortfall, or "efficiency deficiency,"
in the Administration air conditioner proposal forfeits:
- 16,700 MW in peak power reductions (as many as 33 typical baseload
plants or more than a hundred of the combustion turbines typically
used to meet peak loads);
- $730 million in annual bill savings for the nation's consumers;
- 10,000 gigawatt hours in annual electricity savings (the annual
electricity use, for example, of all the households in Connecticut
combined); and
- 38 million metric tons in carbon emission reductions over the
next thirty years, equaling the lifetime emissions of 2,600,000
cars.
"The administration's proposal will please some in the air conditioner
manufacturing industry," concluded deLaski of ASAP, "but at an enormous
cost to the power grid, to consumers, and to the environment."
# # #
For more information:
Andrew deLaski, Appliance Standards Awareness Project 617/363-9470
Rozanne Weissman, Alliance to Save Energy 202/530-2217
Commissioner Art Rosenfeld, California Energy Commission 916/654-4930
Howard Geller, American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy
202/429-8873
The Appliance Standards Awareness Project is dedicated
to increasing understanding of and support for national appliance
and equipment energy efficiency standards. ASAP is sponsored by
leading environmental groups, consumer groups and state government
and utilities.
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