Good morning my friends,
Today is Thursday. Still, the topic is about Energy Saving.
Energy Star just launched a pilot program
for a new designation that’s supposed to help me figure out how to do that. The
new "Most Efficient" Energy Star label will be given to the top 5% of washers, heating and cooling
equipment, televisions, and refrigerator-freezers that already bear the Energy
Star designation.
Although many of the first products to get the designation are pricey ones, it’s a positive step because
virtually all the home appliances on the market already have the designation, which dilutes the value of the program for consumers.
If you’re at a big-box home store shopping for a stainless steel dishwasher,
you can choose from 95 products — 92 of which are Energy Star (the three that
aren’t are budget-busting double-drawer models).
If you’re choosing household products based on energy performance,we suggest you also
check out Consortium for Energy Efficiency ratings.
The highest-rated Energy Star products are on the low end of CEE’s ratings (and
Energy Star isn’t shabby!).
Some people question the whole Energy Star
program, saying it’s too easy to get certified. That’s an assessment the
Government Accounting Office confirmed last year when it tricked the EPA into
giving a gas-powered alarm clock and 15 other fake products the Energy Star label.
That fiasco certainly had me wondering about the value of the program, but it sounds like Energy Star is at least moving in the right direction with this new most-efficient label.
That fiasco certainly had me wondering about the value of the program, but it sounds like Energy Star is at least moving in the right direction with this new most-efficient label.
Did you consider energy use the last
time you bought an appliance? Do you think the “Most Efficient” Energy Star
label is a positive step?
Resource from:
http://www.houselogic.com/blog/saving-energy/new-energy-star-label/
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