Calif. requires TVs to be more energy efficient

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Power-hungry TVs will be banned from store shelves in California after state regulators Wednesday adopted a first-in-the-nation mandate to reduce electricity demand.

On a unanimous vote, the California Energy Commission required all new TVs up to 58 inches to be more energy efficient, beginning in 2011. The requirement will be tougher in 2013, with only a quarter of all TVs now on the market meeting that standard.

The commission estimates that TVs account for about 10 percent of a home’s electricity use. The concern is that the energy draw will rise by as much as 8 percent a year as consumers buy larger TVs, add more to their homes and watch them longer.

Commissioners say energy efficiency standards are the cheapest and easiest way to save electricity.

“We have every confidence this industry will be able to meet the rule and then some,” Energy Commissioner Julia Levin said. “It will save consumers money, it will help protect public health, and it will spark innovation.”

TVs larger than 58 inches, which account for no more than 3 percent of the market, would not be covered by the rule, a concession to independent retailers that sell high-end home-theater TVs. The commission is expected to regulate them later.

Environmental groups supported the tougher standards and hoped they will prompt manufacturers to make new energy-efficient models for the rest of the nation. They said the rules would cut California’s power bill by $1 billion a year, avoiding the need to build a 500-megawatt power plant.

Some manufacturers said implementing a power standard would limit consumer choice and harm California retailers because consumers simply could buy TVs out of state or order them online. Industry representatives also have said the standards would force manufacturers to make TVs with poorer picture quality and fewer features than those sold elsewhere in the U.S.

The TVs sold in California might simply be the models that already meet the requirements. In many cases, those also happen to be the more expensive ones.

“It could drive up costs,” said Dave Arland, who represents the plasma TV industry. “The ones that are super energy efficient are the ones that are more pricey.”

Previous Page|1||

Reader Poll

What's the key to a successful relationship?

Mutual respect
Trust
Communication
Leaving the toilet seat down