Guest guest Posted July 5, 2001 Report Share Posted July 5, 2001 (Boy does this burn me up!! It's for sure the DOE isn't working for the best interests of consumers on this issue. We need the highest SEER we can get to save us money, as well as energy. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham has turned out to be just what we don't need - one more people working against the best interests of our pocketbooks and our environment.!) http://ens.lycos.com/ens/jun2001/2001L-06-26-09.html U.S. GOVERNMENT SUED OVER RULING ON AIR CONDITIONERS NEW YORK, New York, June 26, 2001 (ENS) - A legal challenge has been filed against the Department of Energy (DOE) over the agency's attempts to block an energy efficiency rule for air conditioners. The state attorneys general of New York, Connecticut and California have joined the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Consumer Federation of America and the Public Utility Law Project in filing suit against Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham for his department's attempt to weaken a rule made in the final days of the Clinton administration. " This is a time when the federal government should be doing everything possible to encourage the efficient use of energy, " said New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. " Instead, the Bush administration has dramatically weakened one of the most effective ways to conserve energy. With this lawsuit, we are seeking to compel the administration to adopt a more forward looking course that will help lower energy bills and reduce air pollution. " In separate lawsuits, the plaintiffs charge that the DOE has illegally attempted to delay and weaken a final rule that set the minimum energy efficiency standard for residential air conditioners and heat pumps at a Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio of 13. That SEER represents an efficiency increase of 30 percent from the previous federal standard of 10. The Bush administration wants to weaken the air conditioner standard from 13 to 12 SEER. NRDC calculates that the roll back would increase peak electric demand in the U.S. by 18,000 megawatts (MW) by 2030, forcing the construction of 60 new power plants of 300 MW capacity. Total annual electricity consumption by U.S. households would increase by 11 billion kilowatt hours by 2020 and over the period from 2006 to 2030, U.S. consumers would pay a total of $18.4 billion more to run air conditioners. Emissions of carbon dioxide would also increase by 45 megatonnes. " Secretary Abraham's plan to weaken the air conditioner efficiency standard is in blatant violation of federal law, " said NRDC attorney Kennedy. " Under federal energy law, DOE can't change an energy efficiency standard to make it weaker, so DOE is trying to act as if the Clinton Administration's final rule was just a proposal and make it go away. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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