California adopts first
U.S. energy-saving rules for computers
Send a link to a friend
[December 15, 2016]
By Steve Gorman
LOS
ANGELES (Reuters) - California regulators on Wednesday adopted the
nation's first mandatory energy efficiency rules for computers and
monitors - devices that account for 3 percent of home electric bills and
7 percent of commercial power costs in the state.
The state Energy Commission said that when fully implemented the
industry-backed plan will save consumers $373 million a year and
conserve at least as much electricity annually as it takes to power all
of San Francisco's households.
Final approval at a meeting of the five-member commission in Sacramento
capped several years spent developing the rules in collaboration with
computer makers, consumer activists, the Natural Resources Defense
Council (NRDC) and other environmental groups.
The new rules will cut greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel
combustion to generate power by 700,000 tons a year, the NRDC said.
The standards work by setting benchmarks for machines' overall energy
use - focusing on when they are turned on but left inactive - and leave
manufacturers flexibility to choose which efficiency measures are
employed to meet the standards, an approach aimed at fostering
innovation.
The rules drew support from nearly 40 companies represented by the
Information Technology Industry Council, including such Silicon Valley
giants as HP Inc and Intel Corp.

HP environmental compliance manager Paul Ford called the standards
"groundbreaking," describing them as "ambitious but achievable."
"This is a big deal," said Mark Cooper, a policy analyst for the
Consumer Federation of America, adding that computer ownership per
capita in California ranks second in the world behind Sweden.
In California, computers and monitors draw an estimated 5,610 gigawatt-hours
of energy per year - representing roughly 3 percent of residential
electric bills and 7 percent of power costs for commercial users - much
of that while the devices sit idle.
The NRDC has said the amount of power consumed by computers and monitors
will be reduced by a third once there is a complete turnover in existing
stocks of those devices.
The first phase of the rules takes effect in January 2019 for desktop,
laptop and notebook computers. The standards kick in for workstations
and small-scale servers in January 2018 and for computer monitors in
July 2019.
[to top of second column] |

Apple's new MacBooks are displayed following an Apple event in San
Francisco, California March 9, 2015. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith/File
Photo

Video-game consoles, industrial computers, large-scale servers, tablets and
other handheld devices are exempt.
The
standards will add about $14 to average retail costs of desktops, which are far
less energy efficient than laptops, but will save consumers more than $40 in
electric bills over five years, according to commission estimates.
Over half of desktops typically in use in California now meet the first tier of
the standards, which grow more stringent in 2021. Seventy-three percent of
laptops already comply.
Computer monitors have farther to go, with a compliance rate of just 14 percent
among the 25 million units now installed in homes and businesses statewide.
The latest rules could set a new standard for manufacturers everywhere by virtue
of the size of the consumer market in California, which often leads the way in
U.S. environmental initiatives.
If the same standards are adopted nationwide, they could save U.S. consumers
about $2.2 billion annually in electric bills while reducing energy generation
by the equivalent output of seven coal-fired power plants, the NRDC said.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Jonathan Oatis)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |