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Friday, November 20, 2009 | Latest Update: 12:59PM
Michael Kanellos 11 20 09, 12:59 PM

Ontario May Follow California With TV Energy Standards

Two days after California passed energy efficiency regulations for TV, government officials in Ontario say they might go the same direction.

"We're always looking at ways we need to improve standards with appliances," Energy Minister Gerry Phillips told the Star. "Over the next few months we'll be looking at whether we need to set some additional new standards."

Whether and how quickly another government might follow California was one of the big questions following the 5–0 vote by the California Energy Commission to adopt regulations that set standards for energy efficiency. Under the new California rules, TVs measuring 58 inches or less will have to become 33 percent more efficient by 2011 and 49 percent more efficent by 2013.

The annoucement likely already sent members of the Consumer Electronics Association to Expedia to book flights to Canada's home of greentech. The California regulations came after a long, hard battle.

Many TVs already meet that standard. Panasonic already makes plasma TVs, for instance, that consume 142 watts. Hitachi and others have also begun to show off technologies – like automatic shut-off and TVs with energy efficient lighting schemes – that could lead to TVs that consume less than 100 watts. In fact, 1,000 TVs already meet the standard, the CEC pointed out.

True, but it's the unintended consequences that scare manufacturers. Integrating a hard drive into a TV so that it can record TV shows invariably will increase power consumption. However, a TV with a built-in DVR might consume less energy than TVs and DVRs sold separately. The regulations, thus, could increase power consumption. Energy efficiency can also add to the cost of TVs.

Comments

  • peter dublin 11/20/09 2:06 PM

    Energy Minister Phillips should think twice about this

    Governor Schwarzenegger is shooting himself in the foot!

    1.  Taxation, while still wrong, is better than bans for all concerned.
    TV set taxation based on energy efficiency - unlike bans - gives
    Governor Schwarzenegger’s impoverished California Government income on
    the reduced sales, while consumers keep choice.
    This also applies generally,
    to CARS (with emission tax or gas tax), BUILDINGS, DISHWASHERS, LIGHT BULBS etc,
    where politicians instead keep trying to define what people can or can’t use.
    Politicians can use the tax money raised to fund home insulation
    schemes, renewable projects etc that lower energy use and emissions
    more than remaining product use raises them.
    Energy efficient products can have any sales taxes lowered, making
    them cheaper than today.
    People are not just hit by taxes, they don’t have to buy the higher
    taxed products - and at least they CAN still buy them.


    2.  Product regulation, bans or taxation, are however unwarranted:
    Where there is a problem - deal with the problem!

    Energy: there is no energy shortage
    (given renewable/nuclear development possibilities, with set emission limits)
    and consumers - not politicians - pay for energy and how they wish to use it.

    It might sound great to
    “Let everyone save money by only allowing energy efficient products”
    However:
    Inefficient products that use more energy can have performance,
    appearance and construction advantages
    Examples (using cars, buildings, dishwashers, TV sets, light bulbs etc):
    http://ceolas.net/#cc211x
    For example,  big plasma TV screens have image contrast and other
    advantages along with the bigger image sizes.


    Products using more energy usually cost less, or they’d be more energy
    efficient already.
    Depending on how much they are used, there might therefore not be any
    running cost savings either.

    Other factors contribute to a lack of savings:

    If households use less energy,
    then utility companies make less money,
    and will just raise electricity prices to cover their costs.
    So people don’t save as much money as they thought.

    Conversely,
    energy efficiency in effect means cheaper energy,
    so people just leave TV sets etc on more, knowing that energy bills are lower,
    as also shown by Scottish and Cambridge research
    http://ceolas.net/#cc214x

    Either way, supposed energy - or money -  savings aren’t there.


    ———————————
    Why energy efficiency regulations are wrong,
    whether you are for or against energy and emission conservation
    http://ceolas.net/#cc2x
    Summary
    Politicians don’t object to energy efficiency as it sounds too good to
    be true. It is.
    —The Consumer Side
    Product Performance—Construction and Appearance
    Price Increase—Lack of Actual Savings: Money, Energy or Emissions.
    Choice and Quality affected
    —The Manufacturer Side
    Meeting Consumer Demand—Green Technology—Green Marketing
    —The Energy Side
    Energy Supply—Energy Security—Cars and Oil Dependence
    —The Emission Side
    Buildings—Industry—Power Stations—Light Bulbs

    Reply

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