ACEEE PRESS RELEASE
EXPANDING MARKETS FOR ENERGY EFFICIENCY:
MANY PAST PROGRAMS SUCCESSFUL, FUTURE OPPORTUNITIES ABOUND
For further information, contact: Steven
Nadel at 202-429-8873
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 9,
2003
WASHINGTON,
D.C. -- Energy-efficiency programs that expand markets for efficient
products and practices have made excellent progress in the past
decade, according to a new report published by the American Council
for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE). The report examined 28
"market transformation initiatives" underway around the
United States and found that several of these initiatives have largely
transformed markets and most have made substantial progress. On
the other hand, the study also found that many markets have substantial
room for growth.
To complement
this new report, ACEEE has produced a series of six additional new
reports providing information on new market transformation opportunities
for the residential, commercial, and industrial sectors. The seven
reports are available at http://aceee.org/buildings/mt/mt_newreports/index.htm.
The residential report in this series provides information on furnace
air handlers (which distribute heated and cooled air throughout
a home). Commercial sector reports depict commissioning of existing
buildings, advanced lighting technologies (such as "super T8
lamps" and ceramic metal halide lamps), packaged refrigeration
systems (e.g., refrigerators and ice-makers), and unit heaters (wall-mounted
heaters used to heat open spaces). Another report describes fan
and pump system optimization in the industrial sector.
"These
reports show that market transformation is working on both the national
and regional levels, and can save even more energy in the future,"
stated Steven Nadel, ACEEE's Executive Director and an author of
several of the new reports. "These reports also provide a wealth
of market information and lessons learned on approaches that work
and don't work-information that can aid future program design and
implementation."
The report
on 28 current initiatives, entitled Market Transformation: Substantial
Progress from a Decade of Work, found that two initiatives have
largely transformed markets, seven are well on the way to success,
ten have made substantial progress, eight have made some progress,
and one has made little progress. Initiatives making the most progress
are those addressing residential clothes washers and commercial
exit signs. In the case of residential clothes washers, education
and incentive programs have built market share to more than 20%
in some regions, laying the groundwork for new federal efficiency
standards that will take effect in 2007. In the case of commercial
exit signs, education, incentives, and building codes have raised
the market share for LED exit signs to 50-100% in many regions of
the country, and the federal government is poised to establish a
new national efficiency standard. Both of these initiatives have
benefited from the fact that efficient equipment has multiple benefits
(e.g., cleaner clothes, or longer time between bulb changes), as
well as substantial energy savings. On the other hand, efforts to
promote heat pump water heaters have made little progress due to
high product costs and technical problems with many of the products
on the market.
The series
of reports on new program opportunities discusses many opportunities
for substantial energy savings. For example, relative to typical
current equipment and practices, 40-50% energy savings are possible
from efficient residential air handlers and commercial refrigerators
and freezers, 15-50% from advanced lighting systems and optimized
fan and pump system designs, 20% from efficient unit heaters, and
5-20% from commissioning of existing commercial buildings.
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About ACEEE:The American Council
for an Energy-Efficient Economy is a non-profit organization dedicated
to advancing energy efficiency as a means of promoting both economic
prosperity and environmental protection.
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