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ENERGY STAR ® for Residential Ventilation Fans October 22, 1999 Andrew Fanara fanara.andrew@epa.gov

ENERGY STAR ® for Residential Ventilation Fans October 22, 1999 Andrew Fanara fanara.andrew@epa.gov. Meeting Goals. Summarize ENERGY STAR Program vision Review EPA’s ventialtion fan research since last HVI meeting Introduce draft ENERGY STAR guidelines for ventilation fans

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ENERGY STAR ® for Residential Ventilation Fans October 22, 1999 Andrew Fanara fanara.andrew@epa.gov

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  1. ENERGY STAR®forResidential Ventilation FansOctober 22, 1999 Andrew Fanara fanara.andrew@epa.gov

  2. Meeting Goals • Summarize ENERGY STAR Program vision • Review EPA’s ventialtion fan research since last HVI meeting • Introduce draft ENERGY STAR guidelines for ventilation fans • Discuss draft and next steps

  3. ENERGY STAR Philosophy • Foster public-private partnerships – expand markets for energy-efficient products and reduce energy waste • Reduce air pollution – decrease carbon dioxide and other emissions leading to climate change and urban smog • Recognize the most energy-efficient product models in the market through the use of the ENERGY STAR label • Maintain customer satisfaction – increase energy efficiency without sacrificing performance • Encourage innovation and competition – develop energy-efficiency guidelines that are technology neutral and performance based

  4. ENERGY STAR Family of Products Consumer Electronics Commercial Buildings Office Equipment Windows Appliances Residential Lighting HVAC Insulation Exit Signs ENERGY STAR Homes

  5. Future Direction Whole Home Approach

  6. Program Update: Continued Growth & Success • Strong and increasing industry participation • Over 1,200 manufacturing Partners spanning 29 product categories • 3,400 compliant models • Improvements in design and energy efficiency • Launch of the new Computer and Monitor MOUs (Version 3.0)

  7. ENERGY STARProgram Success

  8. Why JoinENERGY STAR? • Advertise products as innovative, money saving, and with environmental benefits • Use of logo enables consumers to easily identify and select energy efficient products • EPA promotes the ENERGY STARprogram and its products

  9. ENERGYSTAR Outreach Brand Campaign Retail Manufacturers ENERGY STAR Web site Utilities

  10. How EPA & DOE Promote ENERGY STAR Program • ENERGY STARWeb site at www.energystar.gov • 10,000 hits daily • National Brand Awareness & Public Education Campaign • Media outreach (national, local, & trade press) • Media hits – 50 in June/July • Public Service Announcements (PSAs) • New broadcast PSA • Print PSAs – noteworthy placements in May through July • Golf Magazine • American Homestyle & Gardening • Sound & Vision • Elle Décor • Natural Home • Country Living

  11. ENERGY STAR Promotion (continued)

  12. Retail & Utility Participation • Retail • 3,500 retail Partners in 46 states • Sears, Best Buy, Circuit City • Sales tools • Point-of-purchase (POP) materials • Retail training - programs and videos • Utility Partners/Co-branding • 46 utility/energy service providers in 14 States • Serve approximately 32% of the households in the U.S.

  13. Retail & Utility Participation(continued) Over the next 3 years, utilities plan to spend $1 billion on efficiency and market transformation activities. -Pacific NW -California -Wisconsin -Nevada -Arizona -New England -New York -New Jersey -Illinois

  14. International Expansion & Coordination

  15. A Growing Suite of Products New Product Development 4 programs launched in 1998 and 1999 • Tentative plans to launch 5-7 more programs in the remainder of 1999 • Potential New Products • Set-top boxes -Vending machines -Reach-in fridge/freezer • Ventilation fans -Ceiling fans -Traffic signals • Ice cube makers -Air purifiers -Telephony • Visi-coolers -Water coolers -Dehumidifiers • Wall packs -Motors -Unitary AC • Humidifiers

  16. Why Ventilation Fans? • Diverse products – reliably large and growing installed base • Changing usage patterns • Potential for more energy-efficient design • Manufacturer interest in program • Changing building codes and indoor air quality concerns from tighter homes

  17. Market Observations • Diverse products • At least 6 functional uses and categories • Installed base = 143 million • Annual energy consumed = 5.6 billion kWh • Residential market = 7 million units sold/yr. • $300 million in sales • Sales growth = 1% per year • 5 million new units to new homes • 2 million units sold retail • __ % bought by builders • __ % bought by consumers

  18. Market Observationscontinued • Great divergence in product efficiency • Components and sub-components responsible • Shaded pole vs. permanent split capacitor motors • Stator laminations • Shading quality • Air gap • Wiring • Capacitors • Impeller • Scroll • Housing • Auxiliary controls • Timer, humidity and motion sensors

  19. Fan Efficiency Observations • EPA reviewed data and designs from 51 fans • Identified those with efficiency in the 75th percentile to find those with very high efficiency - cfm/W level > 3.4 - cfm range 50 to 1,200 • Surprising outcome -- No clear trend in energy efficiency verses capacity. • Conclusion -- More complex analysis needed to control for component type

  20. Potential Savings from ENERGY STAR Ventilation Fans

  21. Potential Savings(continued)

  22. The Role of ENERGY STARin the Fan Market • ENERGY STAR can be a catalyst for long-term market transformation • Low level of market penetration of energy-efficient fans • Current level approximately 10% • Large variance in product energy efficiency • .5 cfm/watt -- 5 cfm/watt • Easy way for builders and consumers to identify the most efficient products • Testing Guidelines - any changes necessary? • Time Line - Recommended Industry Events/Milestones

  23. EPA’s Promotion of Ventilation Fans Focus on key distribution channels to reach builders and individual consumers • Retailers • Utilities • EPA and DOE resources • ENERGY STAR HIP and Homes programs, DOE FEMP program • Advertising mediums • Print, internet and TV • Trade shows • Procurement efforts

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