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News from Engineering Criteria and Standards Development Katherine Delves Senior Standards Development Manager Office of Energy Efficiency, NRCan Toronto, May 4 - 5, 2006
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2 Guiding Principles for ENERGY STAR Criteria Significant energy savings can be realized on a national basis Product performance can be maintained or enhanced Purchasers will recover their initial investment within a reasonable time period Efficiency can be achieved with several technology options, at least one of which is non-proprietary Product energy consumption and performance can be measured and verified with testing Effectively differentiate products and be visible for purchasers
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3 ENERGY STAR in Canada Harmonized Technology Specs with harmonized markets (Canada / U.S. / World) Products must first meet the requirements of the Energy Efficiency Regulations and Provincial Authorities Where practical, identify Canada only deviations
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4 NRCan Input to ENERGY STAR Criteria CFL Criteria Update #4 Central A/C and H/P Set-top boxes and Digital Television Adaptors Residential Clothes Washers Residential Dishwashers Programmable Thermostats Residential Furnaces (Gas and Oil) Office and Imaging Equipment Seasonal Lights
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5 EnerGuide (comparative) Information and suasion ENERGY STAR identification and promotion of best performers Regulations minimum energy performance; test standards, compliance Informed Choices Promoting the best Eliminating the worst Consumers demand / Producers supply increased range of energy efficient products Benchmark for incentive and promotional programs by organizations, utilities and provincial governments Covers 85% of energy use in home, 50% in commercial buildings Estimated to reduce GHGs by 25 MT by 2010 Equipment Strategy
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6 Impact of ENERGY STAR on Regulations ProductRegulationsENERGY STAR Exit Signs (LED)November 2004EPACT* January 1, 2006 to E* level Clothes WashersPrior EF=.85 01/04 MEF=1.04 01/07 MEF=1.26 Prior MEF=1.26 01/04 MEF=1.42 01/07 MEF=1.80 Transformers (TP1) 01/05 (low and medium voltage) EPACT January 1, 2007 to E* level (low voltage only)
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7 Impact of ENERGY STAR on Regulations – Amendment 9 ProductRegulations (subject to cabinet approval) ENERGY STAR Commercial Refrigerators 2007 - CEC Tier 1 2008 – CEC Tier 2 CEC Tier 4 (EPAct 2010) Vending Machines Tier 1 – mid 2006 Tier 2 – 2008 Tier 1 - 2004 Tier 2 - 2008 Tier 3 – refurbished Central A/CPre-2006 = SEER 10 2006 = SEER 13 Pre-2006 =SEER13 2006 = SEER 14
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8 Impact of ENERGY STAR on Regulations – EPAct and beyond ProductRegulations (subject to regulatory consultations) ENERGY STAR Traffic signals / pedestrian modules E* criteria (LED)EPAct (E* levels) (Jan 1, 2006) Ceiling fans (light kits)Under investigation for harmonization EPAct (E* CFL / Light fixtures, E* fans) (Jan 1, 2007) Commercial Clothes Washers 2007 MEF = 1.26EPAct (Jan 1, 2007) External Power Supplies / Battery Chargers Under investigation for harmonization EPAct CFLsUnder investigation for harmonization EPAct (E* ver. 2 January 1, 2006) Residential Gas Furnaces Investigating E* levelsAFUE >= 90% DehumidifiersInvestigating EPAct or E* levels EPAct slightly lower than E*(Jan 1, 2007)
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9 Specific Areas of Interest Residential lighting ENERGY STAR criteria for CFL’s and Residential Light Fixtures, new criteria for Seasonal (Christmas) Lights Standby Power ENERGY STAR criteria for home electronics, office equipment, battery chargers, external power supplies Commercial Energy Use ENERGY STAR criteria for commercial refrigeration, vending machines Other high efficiency criteria: NEMA premium motors, CEE premium T8, chillers, T5, condensing boilers, other condensing technologies, water heaters, brushless DC motors
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10 Contact Information Katherine Delves 613-947-1207 kdelves@nrcan.gc.ca oee.nrcan.gc.ca/regulations
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