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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, April 13, 2001
CONTACTS:
Andrew deLaski, ASAP, 617-363-9470
Kalee Kreider, National Environmental Trust, 202-887-8818
David Nemtzow, Alliance to Save Energy, 202-857-0666
Ralph Cavanagh, NRDC 415-777-0220
BUSH ROLLS BACK ENERGY-SAVING STANDARDS
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Today President Bush made the nation's
energy and environmental problems worse by trying to roll back cost-effective
energy efficiency standards for central air conditioners. The final
standards, developed over six years and published in January, will
make new air conditioners 30% more efficient starting in 2006; the
Bush Administration is attempting to weaken this standard. This
rollback would increase power bills for tens of millions of Americans,
cause additional deaths from air pollution-related disease, and
increase the likelihood of summertime power outages.
A coalition including environmental groups, consumer and low income
groups, utilities, and state governments protested the rollback
attempt.
"If this illegal rollback succeeds, when the power goes out in
California and other parts of the country, President Bush will be
to blame," said David Nemtzow, President of the Alliance to Save
Energy. "Rolling back energy efficiency in the face of our energy
problems defies common sense."
Last summer, power outages in California occurred when supplies
fell just a few hundred megawatts short of demand. Similar shortfalls
are expected this summer in California and New York. Weakening the
standard would increase electric demand by at least 14,000 megawatts
nationally, increasing the strain on the nation's power systems.
It takes about 50 medium-sized power plants to generate 14,000 megawatts
of power.
"President Bush has just made California's long term electricity
outlook worse. The annual energy saved by the air conditioner standard
in the long run would have been greater than this summer's projected
shortage," said Phil Clapp, President of the National Environmental
Trust.
Air conditioner manufacturers Carrier, Trane, Lennox and York
lobbied hard for the rollback, while Goodman Manufacturing, maker
of Amana products, opposes the rollback.
"President Bush's action today shows he cares more about the profits
of a few companies than about the skyrocketing monthly utility bills
faced by American consumers," said Andrew deLaski, director of the
Appliance Standards Awareness Project, a coalition of consumer and
environmental groups, utilities and state agencies based in Boston.
"Consumers' power bills will go up by a total of at least $800 million
per year if this rollback succeeds."
"This rollback attempt continues the Bush assault on the environment,"
said Clapp. "It would increase power plant carbon emissions by 30
million metric tons -- an amount equal to the greenhouse gases emitted
by 26 million cars in a year." The rollback would also increase
power plant pollution that contributes to smog, acid raid and soot
pollution.
"With more air pollution, more people develop lung disease," said
deLaski. "This rollback would increase mortality associated with
air pollution."
The action today violates the National Appliance Energy Conservation
Act signed by President Reagan in 1987 which prohibits rollbacks
and the Administrative Procedures Act, which defines the process
for establishing new rules.
According to Ralph Cavanagh, Energy Program Director for the Natural
Resources Defense Council, "The Administration is trying to block
one of the fastest, cheapest and cleanest sources of relief for
the West's badly overstressed power grid, and we'll fight this act
of vandalism every inch of the way."
Cavanagh's group and the others pledged to challenge the rollback
in court.
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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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